This is why we can’t use safe, clean nuclear fusion power yet.
This article was written by Matthew Hole, from the Australian National University and Igor Bray, from Curtin University, and was originally published by The Conversation. It's part of their worldwide series on the Future of Nuclear, and you can read the rest of the series here.
Nuclear
fusion is what powers the Sun and the stars - unleashing huge amounts
of energy through the binding together of light elements such as
hydrogen and helium. If fusion power were harnessed directly on Earth,
it could produce inexhaustible clean power, using seawater as the main
fuel, with no greenhouse gas emissions, no proliferation risk, and no
risk of catastrophic accidents. Radioactive waste is very low level and
indirect, arising from neutron activation of the power plant core. With
current technology, a fusion power plant could be completely recycled
within 100 years of shutdown.
Today’s
nuclear power plants exploit nuclear fission - the splitting of atomic
nuclei of heavy elements such as uranium, thorium, and plutonium into
lighter 'daughter' nuclei. This process, which happens spontaneously in
unstable elements, can be harnessed to generate electricity, but it also
generates long-lived radioactive waste.
Why aren’t we using safe, clean nuclear fusion power yet? Despite significant progress in fusion research, why do we physicists treat unfounded claims of "breakthroughs" with scepticism?
The short answer is that is it very difficult to achieve the conditions
that sustain the reaction. But if the experiments under construction
now are successful, we can be optimistic that nuclear fusion power can
be a reality within a generation.
The fusion process
Unlike
fission, nuclei do not spontaneously undergo fusion: atomic nuclei are
positively charged and must overcome their huge electrostatic repulsion
before they can get close enough together that the strong nuclear force,
which binds nuclei together, can kick in.
In nature, the immense
gravitational force of stars is strong enough that the temperature,
density and volume of the star’s core is enough for atomic nuclei to
fuse through 'quantum tunnelling' of this electrostatic barrier. In the
laboratory, quantum tunnelling rates are far too low, and so the barrier
can only be overcome by making the fuel nuclei incredibly hot - six to
seven times hotter than the Sun’s core.
Even the easiest fusion
reaction to initiate - the combination of the hydrogen isotopes
deuterium and tritium, to form helium and an energetic neutron -
requires a temperature of about 120 million degrees Celsius. At such
extreme temperatures, the fuel atoms are ruptured into their component
electrons and nuclei, forming a superheated plasma.
Keeping this
plasma in one place long enough for the nuclei to fuse together is no
mean feat. In the laboratory, the plasma is confined using strong
magnetic fields, generated by coils of electrical superconductors which
create a donut-shaped 'magnetic bottle' in which the plasma is trapped.
Today’s plasma experiments such as the Joint European Torus
can confine plasmas at the required temperatures for net power gain,
but the plasma density and energy confinement time (a measure of the
cooling time of the plasma) are too low to for the plasma to be
self-heated. But progress is being made - today’s experiments have
fusion performance 1,000 times better, in terms of temperature, plasma
density and confinement time, than the experiments of 40 years ago. And
we already have a fair idea of how to move things to the next step.
Regime change
The ITER reactor,
now under construction at Cadarache in the south of France, will
explore the 'burning plasma regime', where the plasma heating from the
confined products of fusion reaction exceeds the external heating power.
The total power gain for ITER will be more than five times the external
heating power in near-continuous operation, and will approach 10-30
times for short durations.
At a cost exceeding US$20 billion, and funded by a consortium of seven nations and alliances,
ITER is the largest science project on the planet. Its purpose is to
demonstrate the scientific and technological feasibility of using fusion
power for peaceful purposes such as electricity generation.
The
engineering and physical challenge is immense. ITER will have a magnetic
field strength of 5 Tesla (100,000 times the Earth’s magnetic field)
and a device radius of 6 metres, confining 840 cubic metres of plasma
(one-third of an Olympic swimming pool). It will weigh 23,000 tonnes and
contain 100,000 km of niobium tin superconducting strands. Niobium tin
is superconducting at 4.5K (about minus 269 degrees Celsius), and so the
entire machine will be immersed in a refrigerator cooled by liquid
helium to keep the superconducting strands just a few degrees above
absolute zero.
ITER
is expected to start generating its first plasmas in 2020. But the
burning plasma experiments aren’t set to begin until 2027. One of the
huge challenges will be to see whether these self-sustaining plasmas can
indeed be created and maintained without damaging the plasma facing
wall or the high heat flux 'divertor' target.
The information we
get from building and operating ITER will inform the design of future
fusion power plants, with an ultimate aim of making the technology work
for commercial power generation. At the moment it seems likely that the
first prototype power plants will be built in the 2030s, and would
probably generate around 1 gigawatt of electricity.
While first-generation power plants
will probably be on a similarly large scale to ITER, it is hoped that
improvement in magnetic confinement and control will lead to more
compact later generation power plants. Likewise, power plants will cost
less than ITER: long-term modelling which extrapolates to power plants
suggest fusion could be economic with low impact on the environment.
So while the challenges to nuclear fusion are big, the pay-off will be huge. All we have to do is get it to work.
This article is part of The Conversation’s worldwide series on the Future of Nuclear. You can read the rest of the series here.
Matthew Hole is Senior Research Fellow, Plasma Research Laboratory at Australian National University. Igor Bray is Head of Physics, Astronomy and Medical Radiation Sciences at Curtin University.
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