Liquid Lithium to Contain Fusion Reactors
nigelc writes: "ABCNews.com reports on Liquid Metal walls for a fusion reactor, and how it may solve some of the temperature problems. Probably only of scientific interest to most of us, unless you're into some serious overclocking.""
Lithium is a lot less active (and thus corrosive) than sodium, but it's not suitable as a coolant for fission reactors because it has this pesky tendency to capture neutrons. In a fusion reactor which needs tritium anyway, this is an advantage.
Just FYI, people play around with "explosive hydrogen gas" for lots of reasons in lots of places. You'll find people playing with hydrogen in every plant which manufactures vegetable shortening from oil, because hydrogenating the oil is part of the process to allow it to solidify at room temperature. Ditto every plant which manufactures nitrogen fertilizers (which starts with fixation via the Haber process, N2 + 3 H2 -> 2 NH3).A little more information and a little less paranoia would serve you well.
Scientists restrict study to entire physical universe; creationist
This concept appears to use lithium as the "first wall". I'm not sure exactly what the first wall has to absorb, besides the heat conducted to it from plasma leakage (plasmas do leak, they are subject to all kinds of instabilities) and soft X-rays. I do know that if you had a symmetric torus you could rotate the magnets to "pump" the liquid metal along the wall using eddy-currents, but I expect that this would be far more expensive and difficult than what they're planning. You can't have two different magnetic fields; you have one field, which is the sum of all the fields induced by all the current-carrying elements in the reactor, plus whatever the Earth decides to give you (which is probably not significant on this scale). You could have a multi-pole magnetic field at the surface which would fall off rapidly toward the center (not unlike the focussing magnets used in a synchrotron) but I'm not sure what effect this would have on either the metal wall or the plasma (and unlike synchrotrons, I don't know any tokamak experts I could ask).
Scientists restrict study to entire physical universe; creationist
A pound of lithium or sodium will absorb a LOT more heat than a pound of solder, so by using reactive alkali metals you have a lot less stuff to pump around than if you used something else as a coolant. Pumping a lot less stuff means a simpler system, and that's always good.
Also, the key reason (which isn't even mentioned in the ABC article) for using lithium is that when lithium is hit by the fusion reactor's neutrons, it will change into radioactive tritium gas, which is a rare fuel the fusion reactor needs to keep going. So you start the reactor with a little bit of tritium you got someplace else, then use the reactor's own neutrons to convert common metal (lithium) into the rare fuel you need to keep it going. No other metal - sodium, lead or tin included - will do this, only lithium.
You are the smartest person in this whole thread, pal - instead of showing your ingnorance by stubbornly defending a particular position with facts (me included), you openly admit the things you don't know and ask intelligent questions to make yourself more knowledgable. Do not ever lose this open mind you have - it is much more rare than tritium gas.