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posted by janrinok on Tuesday August 11 2015, @03:37PM   Printer-friendly
from the power-for-the-people dept.

Nuclear fusion... ten and a few years away?

Advances in magnet technology have enabled researchers at MIT to propose a new design for a practical compact tokamak fusion reactor — and it's one that might be realized in as little as a decade, they say. The era of practical fusion power, which could offer a nearly inexhaustible energy resource, may be coming near.

Using these new commercially available superconductors, rare-earth barium copper oxide (REBCO) superconducting tapes, to produce high-magnetic field coils "just ripples through the whole design," says Dennis Whyte, a professor of Nuclear Science and Engineering and director of MIT's Plasma Science and Fusion Center. "It changes the whole thing."

The stronger magnetic field makes it possible to produce the required magnetic confinement of the superhot plasma — that is, the working material of a fusion reaction — but in a much smaller device than those previously envisioned. The reduction in size, in turn, makes the whole system less expensive and faster to build, and also allows for some ingenious new features in the power plant design. The proposed reactor, using a tokamak (donut-shaped) geometry that is widely studied, is described in a paper in the journal Fusion Engineering and Design, co-authored by Whyte, PhD candidate Brandon Sorbom, and 11 others at MIT. The paper started as a design class taught by Whyte and became a student-led project after the class ended.

[...] While most characteristics of a system tend to vary in proportion to changes in dimensions, the effect of changes in the magnetic field on fusion reactions is much more extreme: The achievable fusion power increases according to the fourth power of the increase in the magnetic field. Thus, doubling the field would produce a 16-fold increase in the fusion power. "Any increase in the magnetic field gives you a huge win," Sorbom says. While the new superconductors do not produce quite a doubling of the field strength, they are strong enough to increase fusion power by about a factor of 10 compared to standard superconducting technology, Sorbom says. This dramatic improvement leads to a cascade of potential improvements in reactor design.

They are calling it an affordable, robust, compact (ARC) reactor. Presentation [PDF].

ARC: A compact, high-field, fusion nuclear science facility and demonstration power plant with demountable magnets [abstract]


Original Submission

 
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  • (Score: 2) by VLM on Tuesday August 11 2015, @06:23PM

    by VLM (445) Subscriber Badge on Tuesday August 11 2015, @06:23PM (#221359)

    Right right I think we agree on the good parts. Will be very interesting to see what happens with these guys. There are merely aspects of the wiki article that are non sequitur.

    I suspect "shipping crate sized" means our Navy will fund it and we'll see nothing for quite awhile. Its like they were fishing for the Navy with bait. I suppose all branches have their reasons for finding it a tasty piece of bait, except perhaps for the air force of our navy's army aka the USMC air corps.

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  • (Score: 2) by takyon on Tuesday August 11 2015, @06:34PM

    by takyon (881) <reversethis-{gro ... s} {ta} {noykat}> on Tuesday August 11 2015, @06:34PM (#221367) Journal

    The Navy likes the taste of fusion bait so much, they are apparently looking into cold fusion/LENR:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cold_fusion#United_States [wikipedia.org]
    https://www.google.com/?gws_rd=ssl#q=navy+cold+fusion [google.com]

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    • (Score: 3, Informative) by VLM on Tuesday August 11 2015, @07:00PM

      by VLM (445) Subscriber Badge on Tuesday August 11 2015, @07:00PM (#221379)

      The navy has (had?) a thing for the polywell/fusor approach too.

      That's another one of those "works so well it fell off the face of the earth" technologies.

      Last I heard WB-8 exceeded all contract expectations so the next step was (insert radio silence here).

      I'm sure when they resurface the stories about WB-9 will be interesting to hear, hope there's good results.

      Fusors don't get much love from the conventional people because they're not the politically correct tokamak or even a mirror, and they don't get any love from the conspiracy theorists because they're already commercially successful and shipping controllable neutron sources and you can't stick it to the Man when the Man is selling commercialized portable neutron sources.

      Fusor = orphan of fusion research yet is also another naval research fusion operation.