The Prague Post - Nuclear fusion: harnessing the power of the stars

EUR -
AED 4.342611
AFN 77.45623
ALL 97.304464
AMD 448.237789
ANG 2.116708
AOA 1084.321577
ARS 1696.24015
AUD 1.714463
AWG 2.130212
AZN 2.014886
BAM 1.969652
BBD 2.380743
BDT 144.62707
BGN 1.985798
BHD 0.445876
BIF 3501.565404
BMD 1.182466
BND 1.512248
BOB 8.17015
BRL 6.254185
BSD 1.182013
BTN 108.527718
BWP 16.399591
BYN 3.347003
BYR 23176.329755
BZD 2.377825
CAD 1.619416
CDF 2577.77588
CHF 0.924221
CLF 0.026068
CLP 1029.313301
CNY 8.246048
CNH 8.219308
COP 4302.99306
CRC 585.014168
CUC 1.182466
CUP 31.335344
CVE 111.068171
CZK 24.269288
DJF 210.148288
DKK 7.467631
DOP 74.473744
DZD 153.280104
EGP 55.750311
ERN 17.736987
ETB 184.165901
FJD 2.660908
FKP 0.876556
GBP 0.86702
GEL 3.181295
GGP 0.876556
GHS 12.887301
GIP 0.876556
GMD 86.320424
GNF 10355.975083
GTQ 9.074699
GYD 247.358733
HKD 9.219308
HNL 31.180278
HRK 7.536687
HTG 155.063281
HUF 382.297703
IDR 19849.225723
ILS 3.706853
IMP 0.876556
INR 108.4026
IQD 1548.590612
IRR 49811.372173
ISK 145.802543
JEP 0.876556
JMD 186.107378
JOD 0.838415
JPY 184.224672
KES 152.396647
KGS 103.406166
KHR 4758.470447
KMF 496.636052
KPW 1064.230076
KRW 1710.111654
KWD 0.362343
KYD 0.985325
KZT 595.181506
LAK 25550.085284
LBP 105875.81867
LKR 366.205374
LRD 218.723512
LSL 19.078874
LTL 3.491515
LVL 0.715262
LYD 7.522461
MAD 10.829613
MDL 20.122513
MGA 5348.746417
MKD 62.079442
MMK 2482.931007
MNT 4216.988204
MOP 9.496271
MRU 47.259356
MUR 54.287453
MVR 18.269544
MWK 2050.142601
MXN 20.53547
MYR 4.736371
MZN 75.571836
NAD 19.078874
NGN 1680.816462
NIO 43.495889
NOK 11.555582
NPR 173.644147
NZD 1.987619
OMR 0.454654
PAB 1.182365
PEN 3.965588
PGK 5.056566
PHP 69.745426
PKR 330.74127
PLN 4.207651
PYG 7906.239512
QAR 4.310507
RON 5.095368
RSD 117.401163
RUB 89.276238
RWF 1724.406213
SAR 4.434097
SBD 9.605892
SCR 17.539115
SDG 711.257528
SEK 10.576779
SGD 1.504142
SHP 0.887156
SLE 28.856501
SLL 24795.715807
SOS 674.483116
SRD 45.076824
STD 24474.654751
STN 24.673519
SVC 10.344895
SYP 13077.569118
SZL 19.078203
THB 36.620379
TJS 11.054774
TMT 4.13863
TND 3.441201
TOP 2.847094
TRY 51.276607
TTD 8.029468
TWD 37.124741
TZS 3021.200525
UAH 50.978946
UGX 4178.384891
USD 1.182466
UYU 44.773774
UZS 14346.895918
VES 416.541807
VND 31033.815022
VUV 141.976601
WST 3.267373
XAF 660.737809
XAG 0.011503
XAU 0.000237
XCD 3.195673
XCG 2.130836
XDR 0.821057
XOF 660.734995
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.785845
ZAR 19.064341
ZMK 10643.615432
ZMW 23.195025
ZWL 380.753506
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    84.04

    0%

  • RYCEF

    0.1500

    17.12

    +0.88%

  • CMSC

    0.1000

    23.75

    +0.42%

  • AZN

    1.2600

    92.95

    +1.36%

  • BTI

    0.9400

    59.16

    +1.59%

  • NGG

    1.3200

    81.5

    +1.62%

  • GSK

    0.5000

    49.15

    +1.02%

  • RIO

    3.1300

    90.43

    +3.46%

  • RELX

    0.0600

    39.9

    +0.15%

  • BCE

    0.4900

    25.2

    +1.94%

  • BCC

    -1.1800

    84.33

    -1.4%

  • JRI

    0.0100

    13.68

    +0.07%

  • CMSD

    0.0900

    24.13

    +0.37%

  • VOD

    0.2300

    14.17

    +1.62%

  • BP

    1.1000

    36.53

    +3.01%

Nuclear fusion: harnessing the power of the stars
Nuclear fusion: harnessing the power of the stars / Photo: Philip Saltonstall - Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory/AFP

Nuclear fusion: harnessing the power of the stars

The US Department of Energy's nuclear fusion laboratory says there will be a "major scientific breakthrough" announced Tuesday, as media report that scientists have finally surpassed an important milestone for the technology: getting more energy out than was put in.

Text size:

The announcement has the scientific community abuzz, as nuclear fusion is considered by some to be the energy of the future, particularly as it produces no greenhouse gases, leaves little waste and has no risk of nuclear accidents.

Here is an update on how nuclear fusion works, what projects are underway and estimates on when they could be completed:

- Energy of the stars -

Fusion differs from fission, the technique currently used in nuclear power plants, by fusing two atomic nuclei instead of splitting one.

In fact, fusion is the process that powers the sun.

Two light hydrogen atoms, when they collide at very high speeds, fuse together into one heavier element, helium, releasing energy in the process.

"Controlling the power source of the stars is the greatest technological challenge humanity has ever undertaken," tweeted physicist Arthur Turrell, author of "The Star Builders."

- Two distinct methods -

Producing fusion reactions on Earth is only possible by heating matter to extremely high temperatures -- over 100 million degrees Celsius (180 million Fahrenheit).

"So we have to find ways to isolate this extremely hot matter from anything that could cool it down. This is the problem of containment," Erik Lefebvre, project leader at the French Atomic Energy Commission (CEA), told AFP.

One method is to "confine" the fusion reaction with magnets.

In a huge donut-shaped reactor, light hydrogen isotopes (deuterium and tritium) are heated until they reach the state of plasma, a very low density gas.

Magnets confine the swirling plasma gas, preventing it from coming into contact with the chamber's walls, while the atoms collide and begin fusing.

This is the type of reactor used in the major international project known as ITER, currently under construction in France, as well as the Joint European Torus (JET) near Oxford, England.

A second method is inertial confinement fusion, in which high energy lasers are directed simultaneously into a thimble-sized cylinder containing the hydrogen.

This technique is used by the French Megajoule Laser (LMJ), and the world's most advanced fusion project, the California-based National Ignition Facility (NIF).

Inertial confinement is used to demonstrate the physical principles of fusion, while magnetic confinement seeks to mimic future industrial-scale reactors.

- State of research -

For decades, scientists have attempted to achieve what is known as "net energy gain" -- that is, more energy is produced by the fusion reaction than it takes to activate it.

According to reports by the Financial Times and the Washington Post, that will be the "major scientific breakthrough" announced Tuesday by the NIF.

But Lefebvre cautions that "the road is still very long" before "a demonstration on an industrial scale that is commercially viable."

He says such a project will take another 20 or 30 years to be completed.

To get there, researchers must first increase the efficiency of the lasers and reproduce the experiment more frequently.

- Fusion's benefits -

The NIF's reported success has sparked great excitement in the scientific community, which is hoping the technology could be a game-changer for global energy production.

Unlike fission, fusion carries no risk of nuclear accidents.

"If a few lasers are missing and they don't go off at the right time, or if the confinement of the plasma by the magnetic field... is not perfect," the reaction will simply stop, Lefebvre says.

Nuclear fusion also produces much less radioactive waste than current power plants, and above all, emits no greenhouse gases.

"It is an energy source that is totally carbon-free, generates very little waste, and is intrinsically extremely safe," according to Lefebvre, who says fusion could be "a future solution for the world's energy problems."

Regardless of Tuesday's announcement, however, the technology is still a far way off from producing energy on an industrial scale, and cannot therefore be relied on as an immediate solution to the climate crisis.

R.Krejci--TPP