New 'Stellarator' Design for Fusion Reactors
eldavojohn writes "The holy grail of fusion reactors has always seemed 'just a few years off' for many decades. But a recent design enhancement termed a 'Stellarator' may change all that. The point at which a fusion reactor crashes is when particles begin escaping due to disruptions in the plasma. A NYU team has discovered that coiling specific wires to form a magnetic field may contain the plasma. This may be a a viable way to create a plasma body with axial symmetry, and a far better chance of remaining stable. Like other forms of containment this does require energy itself, but could bring us closer to a stable fusion reactor. It may not be cold fusion or 'table top' fusion but it certainly is a step forward. The paper is up for peer review in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences."
The summary makes it sound like stellarators are something novel, which they are not. Research has been going on for decades, most notably with the German Wendelstein experimental reactors.
A stellarator is not a new design. The first examples were built here in 1951.
Related links: * LDX@MIT
* Physics of magnetically confined fusion [pdf]
* The main principles of magnetic fusion
* Magnetic fusion experiments at LANL
* High density magnetic fusion
* Has a good bit on magnetic confinement
* Can a magnetic field be used to contain plasma?
* International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor
* What's happening in fusion?
* Design of magnetic fields for fusion experiments [pdf]
* Wikipedia article on the topic
* Magnetized target fusion bibliography
* Plasma physics bibliography
* Databases for plasma physics
* Plasma physics laboratories
* List of plasma physicists
* Plasma on the internet
4. Use magnetic field outside plasma ball to contain radiation
This seems like the exact reason why basic physics should be mandatory in schools. Dear God. How exactly would a magnetic field contain neutral photons ? They will generate zero flux and will not interact with the field at all.
Well, I'm not a plasma physicist, so I'm not intimately familiar with all the details, but one thing that jumps out at me right away is the distinction between energy and power.
Energy is the ability to do work. Power is the rate at which work is done or energy is extracted.
The plasma contains a great amount of thermal energy with a tendency to do work (by difussing to the reactor walls), so you have to set up a barrier to accomplishing that work. This is analogous to a dam holding back water. The water, due to it's elevation, has a lot of potential energy, but no power is required to hold it back. Power is extracted as it's let through the turbines.
It's a little more complicated for a plasma. A charged particle moving through a varying magnetic field (like that surrounding the reactor) does work and thereby loses energy. As a result, there is a tendency, although less definite than with a dam and water, for the hydrogen ions to only move around in the reactor along lines of constant magnetic field strength.
Once a magnetic field is established, it ideally takes no energy to maintain, except as charged particles move through it. So power only has to be supplied to the electromagnets to account for their inefficiency (0 under ideal conditions in a superconducting Tokamak) or as work is done on the field by charged particles escaping. Since most of the energy from the reactions is carried away by neutrons, which have no electric charge and therefore don't affect the field, the containment power is sufficiently smaller than the reaction power that this is theoretically feasible as a power plant.
Actually, the biggest power demand in a Tokamak as I understand is for heating the plasma to a temperature where fusion will take place. The hotter it gets, the faster fusion occurs, eventually reaching a breakeven point energy is released by fusion faster than it is carried away by escaping neutrons and gamma rays. Then the plasma can sustain itself. We haven't gotten there yet.
Sorry, the dam analogy isn't great and talking about charged particles in a magnetic field is a little abstract. Hope this helps.
"Energy" in the context of containing a plasma is actually work. They have the same units, so they're like exchangeable currencies (i.e. some energy will buy you work, and some negative work will buy you energy)
The energy that a plasma intrinsically has (like kinetic energy) is just that; energy.
Here's a related (but certainly not airtight) analogy: A brick can have some gravitational potential energy relative to the earth's surface. If you're standing on the ground, that brick will have some nominal gravitational potential energy. If you lift that brick 1 meter, you'll do some amount of work. If you're hanging over the edge of a helicopter at a couple hundred meters, that brick has substantially higher gravitational potential energy. However, if you lift the brick a distance of 1 meter, you'll still do the same amount of work.
So, what's going on here is that a plasma can indeed have a lot of energy (relative to the earth's environment). However, the "energy" we're putting in is actually work to contain that plasma.
Sig free's the way to be.