Carbonium Core is building what it says will be America's first commercial-scale domestic supply chain for nuclear-grade graphite, a critical material for next-generation reactors that AI-driven electricity demand is pulling into focus.
Carbonium Core is building what it says will be America's first commercial-scale domestic supply chain for nuclear-grade graphite, a critical material for next-generation reactors that AI-driven electricity demand is pulling into focus.

Carbonium Core is building what it says will be America's first commercial-scale domestic supply chain for nuclear-grade graphite, a critical material for next-generation reactors that AI-driven electricity demand is pulling into focus.
Carbonium Core Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Suren Ajjarapu outlined the company's phased commercialization roadmap during a Wall Street Reporter "Next Super Stock" livestream on Tuesday, describing a strategy that moves from pilot-scale production to a planned commercial facility targeting roughly 50,000 metric tons of nuclear-grade graphite annually. Using current market pricing assumptions, management estimates that represents a long-term annual revenue opportunity approaching $1.5 billion, subject to execution, financing, customer demand and regulatory approvals.
"We're building the company that addresses one of the most important supply-chain gaps in advanced nuclear energy," Ajjarapu said. "As the world commits significant capital toward next-generation nuclear power, our objective is to establish a secure domestic source of reactor-grade graphite using proprietary technology licensed from Oak Ridge National Laboratory together with U.S.-based feedstock."
The company is pursuing a reverse merger with TOMI Environmental Solutions Inc. (NASDAQ: TOMZ), a deal structured as an all-stock transaction in which Carbonium Core shareholders would own approximately 90% of the combined entity. Thunder Rock Capital served as exclusive M&A advisor. The transaction requires at least $10 million in financing, NASDAQ listing approval and TOMI shareholder consent. TOMI shares rose 7.5% following the announcement, though the company carries an active $50 million S-3 shelf registration that presents ongoing dilution risk.
The AI-Nuclear Convergence Driving Demand
The thesis behind Carbonium Core's strategy rests on three converging trends. Artificial intelligence and hyperscale data centers are pushing electricity demand to levels that utilities and technology companies say cannot be met by intermittent renewables alone. Major tech firms have committed billions of dollars to advanced nuclear power as a source of reliable, around-the-clock baseload generation.
That nuclear buildout requires nuclear-grade graphite — a high-purity form of carbon used as a moderator and structural material inside Generation IV reactors and Small Modular Reactors (SMRs), typically factory-built units producing less than 300 megawatts. The material must meet strict impurity standards because even trace contaminants absorb neutrons and reduce reactor efficiency.
"Every new generation of AI data centers requires enormous amounts of reliable electricity, and increasingly that conversation leads to advanced nuclear power," Ajjarapu said. "We believe Carbonium Core is positioned upstream of that trend by supplying one of the critical materials required to build the next generation of nuclear reactors."
The third trend is government prioritization of domestic critical-mineral supply chains. The U.S. currently relies on foreign producers for nearly all of its nuclear-grade graphite, creating what the Department of Energy has identified as a strategic vulnerability. Carbonium Core's technology, licensed from Oak Ridge National Laboratory, uses domestically sourced feedstock and proprietary purification methods to produce reactor-grade material on U.S. soil.
Commercialization Milestones and Execution Risk
Management identified five milestones it considers critical to the commercialization strategy: qualification of Carbonium Core's graphite with leading advanced reactor developers; letters of intent and long-term supply agreements with prospective reactor customers; continued advancement of the pilot production facility; commercial deployment of the Oak Ridge-licensed technology; and progress on government financing initiatives supporting domestic critical-mineral production.
The company is still in the development stage, and the projected $1.5 billion revenue opportunity depends on multiple variables that remain unproven. No customer agreements have been announced. The pilot facility has not yet demonstrated commercial-scale output. The reverse merger with TOMI must clear shareholder and regulatory hurdles before Carbonium Core becomes a publicly traded entity.
For investors, the story hinges on whether Carbonium Core can execute from pilot to commercial scale faster than competing suppliers in China and Europe, which currently dominate the nuclear-grade graphite market. TOMI shares, trading with the $50 million shelf overhang, will reflect progress against each milestone as it is achieved — or the absence of it.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.