Graduate seminar highlights digital twin technology for Purdue’s nuclear research reactor

Graduate seminar highlights digital twin technology for Purdue’s nuclear research reactor

PhD candidate Vasileios Theos is advancing nuclear engineering research at the Purdue NE with his work on a high-fidelity digital twin of the Purdue University Reactor (PUR-1). Selected for the Graduate Research Recognition Seminar, Theos is developing a platform that combines real-time data with advanced modeling to simulate reactor behavior, supporting research, operator training, and emerging technologies in autonomous control and system diagnostics.


Advanced modeling and real-time data integration were the focus of a recent Purdue University School of Nuclear Engineering seminar, where a graduate student presented an experimentally validated high fidelity digital twin of the university’s nuclear reactor.

Vasileios Theos, a PhD candidate in nuclear engineering, delivered “Overview of the PUR-1 Digital Twin” on March 11 as part of the department’s Graduate Research Recognition Seminar series, which showcases student-led work at the forefront of nuclear engineering innovation. Each semester, one student is selected to present.

Theos’ work centers on a high-fidelity digital twin of the Purdue University Reactor (PUR-1), a platform that combines physics-based and data-driven models with live reactor data to simulate and predict reactor behavior in real-time. It integrates neutronics, thermal-hydraulics, communication, and instrumentation models, enabling real-time monitoring, diagnostics and predictive analysis.

“This type of platform allows us to better understand how the reactor behaves under a wide range of conditions without directly impacting operations,” Theos said.

Theos explained that the digital twin also serves as a cyber-physical testbed for emerging research areas, including autonomous reactor control, anomaly detection, and advanced instrumentation systems. By linking directly with the PUR-1 data acquisition system, the platform allows researchers to test new operation strategies in a laboratory-controlled environment. In addition to research applications, the system supports operator training and workforce development by creating realistic, simulation-based scenarios for students and researchers.

Advised by Stylianos Chatzidakis, assistant professor of nuclear engineering and associate reactor director, Theos holds a bachelor’s degree in mechanical engineering from the National Technical University of Athens and a master’s degree in nuclear engineering from Purdue University. His research spans digital twins, multiphysics simulation, reactor cybersecurity, and machine learning–based modeling, with a focus on validation and uncertainty quantification.