Could the stalled fusion progress be about to get a kickstart?
Compact tokamaks: the approach to bring fusion energy within reach
Compact tokamaks: the approach to bring fusion energy within reach
I don't think it is stalled.Could the stalled fusion progress
The apparent slow progress is because it's not a priority. Economics driven.Traditional designs have moved to larger dimensions, culminating in the ITER experiment currently under construction in the south of France. This will be over 30m tall and weigh about 23,000 tonnes. The demonstration reactor that follows, dubbed DEMO, will likely be slightly bigger again. When ITER was being designed in the 1990s, it was believed that the only feasible way to increase fusion power was to increase machine size. But the size and complexity of ITER has led to very slow progress in the fusion program, with first fusion set for the mid 2020s. Tired of waiting so long and recognising the inherent difficulties of such a big project, some have been questioning the possibility of a smaller way to fusion.
It's been tested. The fusion part is fail-safe, anything breaks and there is no fusion, thus no neutrons.Not sure how effective these would be in reality.
Nuclear fuel is primarily U-238 with anywhere between 1.5% to 4.5% U-235 enrichment (for UK AGRs). So, essentially, the unused U-238 and a small amount of transuranic elements is the waste.It's been tested. The fusion part is fail-safe, anything breaks and there is no fusion, thus no neutrons.
It's waste that's used, not the unused fuel, so a runaway fission reaction isn't possible. That's my understanding. You need fission fuel above a certain level of purity to get "meltdown", by definition, the idea is to use exhausted fuel rods.
I don't know what reprocessing there is between removing "used" rods and using "waste" around the tokamak, except that it allegedly makes the waste almost safe enough to bury in your garden and supposed to be an inherently safe way to get more power output, a net output from experimental fusion reactors today.So, essentially, the unused U-238 and a small amount of transuranic elements is the waste.
Thread starter | Similar threads | Forum | Replies | Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
T | First-ever compact nuclear reactor runs for 8 years without water | Science & Nature | 17 |