Fusion ignition

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Fusion ignition is the point at which a nuclear fusion reaction becomes self-sustaining. This occurs when the energy being given off by the fusion reactions heats the fuel mass more rapidly than various loss mechanisms cool it. At this point, the external energy needed to heat the fuel to fusion temperatures is no longer needed.[1] As the rate of fusion varies with temperature, the point of ignition for any given machine is typically expressed as a temperature.

Ignition Results Indicated[]

On Sunday, August 8th 2021, the National Ignition Facility appear to have triggered Ignition in the laboratory for the first time in the 60+ year history of the ICF program.[2][3] The shot yield 1.3 Megajoules of fusion energy, an over 8X improvements on tests done in spring of 2021 and a 25X increase over NIF 2018 record experiments.[4] Early reports estimated that 250 kilo-joules of energy was deposited on the target (roughly 2/3 of the energy from the beams), which resulted in a 1.3 Megajoule output from the fusing plasma.[5]

Current research[]

Ignition should not be confused with breakeven, a similar concept that compares the total energy being given off to the energy being used to heat the fuel. The key difference is that breakeven ignores losses to the surroundings, which do not contribute to heating the fuel, and thus are not able to make the reaction self-sustaining. Breakeven is an important goal in the fusion energy field, but ignition is required for a practical energy producing design.[6]

In nature, stars reach ignition at temperatures similar to that of the Sun, around 15 million Kelvin (27 million degrees F). Stars are so large that the fusion products will almost always interact with the plasma before their energy can be lost to the environment at the outside of the star. In comparison, man-made reactors are far less dense and much smaller, allowing the fusion products to easily escape the fuel. To offset this, much higher rates of fusion are required, and thus much higher temperatures; most man-made fusion reactors are designed to work at temperatures around 100 million degrees, or higher.

As of 2020, no man-made reactor has reached breakeven. Ignition has been achieved in the cores of detonating thermonuclear weapons.

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory has its 1.8 MJ laser system running at full power. This laser system is designed to compress and heat a mixture of deuterium and tritium, which are both isotopes of hydrogen, in order to compress the isotopes to a fraction of their original size, and fuse them into helium atoms (releasing neutrons in the process).[7]

In January 2012, National Ignition Facility Director Mike Dunne predicted in a Photonics West 2012 plenary talk that ignition would be achieved at NIF by October 2012.[8] However, as of 2015, NIF is operating at conditions about 1/10 to 1/3 of breakeven. Confusingly, by LLNL definitions, ignition and breakeven occur at the same point, due to specifics of their experiment.

The world's first fusion reactor predicted to be capable of 'breakeven' is currently underway. Based on the Tokamak reactor design, the ITER is intended to achieve fusion for a prolonged period of time before structural integrity is affected. Construction is expected to be completed in 2025.

Experts believe that achieving fusion ignition is the first step towards the potentially limitless energy source that is nuclear fusion.[9]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Chandler, David L. "New project aims for fusion ignition". MIT News. MIT. Retrieved 24 February 2012.
  2. ^ https://phys.org/news/2021-08-major-nuclear-fusion-milestone-ignition.html
  3. ^ https://www.llnl.gov/news/national-ignition-facility-experiment-puts-researchers-threshold-fusion-ignition
  4. ^ "Email From Fusion Power Associates, FPN21-50 NIF takes a Major Step Forward
  5. ^ "Laboratory Update" LLNL Directors Office Thursday 8/12/21, Private Email
  6. ^ "The National Ignition Facility: Ushering in a New Age for Science". Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. Archived from the original on 2 May 2012. Retrieved 26 February 2012.
  7. ^ National Research Council (U.S.). Plasma Committee. Plasma science: advancing knowledge in the national interest. The National Academic Press. p. 24. ISBN 0-309-16436-2.
  8. ^ Hatcher, Mike (26 January 2012). "PW 2012: fusion laser on track for 2012 burn". Optics.org. San Francisco. Retrieved 11 January 2019.
  9. ^ National Research Council (U.S.). Plasma Committee. Plasma science: advancing knowledge in the national interest. The National Academic Press. ISBN 0-309-16436-2.

External links[]


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