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Inertial fusion power plant - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Inertial fusion power plant

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

An Inertial fusion power plant is intended to produce electric power by use of inertial confinement fusion techniques on an industrial scale. This type of power plant is still in a research phase.

It is frequently assumed that the only medium-term perspective (within a few decades) for fusion to get to civilian energy production is the tokamak path, through the ITER international project, by use of magnetic confinement techniques. However, as suggested by various proposals in the inertial fusion field, setting up an inertial fusion energy (IFE) path, simultaneously to the tokamak path, is worth considering.

Contents

[edit] Overall principles of an IFE reactor

For an easier understanding, it is worth using the analogy of operation between an IFE reactor and a gasoline engine. By applying such an analogy, the process may be seen as a four strokes cycle:

  • intake of the fusion fuel (microcapsule) into the reactor chamber;
  • compression of the microcapsule in order to initiate the fusion reactions;
  • explosion of the plasma created during the compression stroke, leading to the release of fusion energy;
  • exhaust of the reaction residue, which will be treated afterwards to extract all the reusable elements, mainly tritium.

To allow such an operation, an inertial fusion reactor is made of several subsets:

A golden hohlraum used in laser inertial confinement.
A golden hohlraum used in laser inertial confinement.
  • the injection system, which delivers to the reaction chamber the fusion fuel capsules, and at the same time the possible devices necessary to initiate fusion:
    • the container (hohlraum), intended to take the fuel capsule to a uniform very high temperature, mainly for laser and ion beam confinement techniques;
    • the "wires array" and its power transmission line, for z-pinch confinement technique;
  • the "driver" used to compress the fusion fuel capsules; depending on the technique, it can be:
    • lasers;
    • an ion beam accelerator;
    • a z-pinch device;
  • the reaction chamber, build upon:
    • an external wall made of metal;
    • an internal blanket intended to protect the external wall from the fusion shockwave and radiation, to get the emitted energy, and to produce the tritium fuel;
  • the system intended to process reaction products and debris.
Further information: An example of a planned IFE plant can be seen in the Z machine article

[edit] IFE projects

Several projects of inertial fusion power plants have been proposed, notably power production plans based on the following experimental devices, either in operation or under building:

As may be noted, only first two of these projects is based on z-pinch confinement, all others being based on laser confinement techniques.

The various phases of such a project are the following[1] :

  • burning demonstration: reproducible achievement of energy release.
  • high gain demonstration: experimental demonstration of the feasibility of a reactor with a sufficient energy gain.
  • industrial demonstration: validation of the various technical options, and of the whole data needed to define a commercial reactor.
  • commercial demonstration: demonstration of the reactor ability to work over a long period, while respecting all the requirements for safety, liability and cost.

At the moment, according to the available data[2], inertial confinement fusion experiments have not gone beyond the first phase, as well for laser (although it is strongly expected to reach the objectives of the second phase around 2010, when NIF and Megajoule are complete) as for z-pinch (Z machine); these techniques should now demonstrate their ability to obtain a high fusion energy gain, as well as their capability for repetitive working.

[edit] Notes and references

  1. ^ In the magnetic confinement field, the 2nd phase corresponds to the objectives of ITER, the 3rd to these of its follower DEMO, in 20 to 30 years, and the 4th to those of a possible PROTO, in 40 to 50 years.
  2. ^ This chapter is based on data available in June 2006, when Megajoule and NIF lasers are not yet into complete service.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

[edit] Generalities about IFE

[edit] Inertial fusion experimentation sites

[edit] IFE projects

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