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Re: bell345 post# 64

Monday, 02/08/2016 10:57:00 AM

Monday, February 08, 2016 10:57:00 AM

Post# of 174
Fusion Energy Facing A Major Test This Month
http://oilprice.com/Alternative-Energy/Nuclear-Power/Fusion-Energy-Facing-A-Major-Test-This-Month.html


Fusion power has been a dream for mankind for decades now,
but despite attracting perhaps more time, money,
and attention than any other technological goal,
the dream of fusion power has remained largely that; a dream.

The history of fusion power is littered with shattered dreams
and false starts, but it looks like, for the first time,
there are some promising signs and significant milestones
being achieved in fusion power.

Venture capitalists of all stripes have continued to pour money
into fusion power, and there are certainly some interesting
commercial milestones being achieved, but the most promising
work right now might be that coming from Germany.

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The problem with fusion power has always been that in order to get the approach to work,
superheated gases with a temperature of roughly 100 million degrees

Celsius have to be harnessed to generate the needed atomic behavior.

At that heat, electrons are ripped away from atoms which leaves
a plasma “slurry” of electrons and ions. This also makes the
ions travel fast enough to overcome their mutual repulsion
and fuse resulting in fusion power.

But gas heated to this level
– several times the heat of the sun
– is also impossible to contain in a normal vessel made of any matter known to man.

Instead, the only way to hold these gases is in a magnetic cage.

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That’s where Tokamaks come in. These devices are the current standard in fusion research.

Tokamaks are essentially coiled magnetic cages designed to contain
the plasma gas used in fusion power.

Tokamaks have been the focus of research in fusion power for
decades now culminating in the massive international effort
to build the world’s biggest tokamak.
The project, called ITER,

is based in France and will cost more than $15 billion to build.

ITER is supposed to represent the next real steps towards a commercially viable fusion reactor.

But the project faces a major problem because it is a tokamak design.

Tokamaks use internal coils that can only control the plamsa
in short bursts, which actually ends up using more energy
than is generated. Structurally, the tokamaks are an
aesthetically appealing design,
but it is unclear if the torus shape they are based can lead
to the breakthroughs needed to make fusion a viable source of
energy.
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The alternative is a much uglier device called a called a stellarator.

Stellarators look like something out of a junkyard,
but they avoid the design problems that plague tokamaks.

Instead, of using internal magnetic coils as tokamaks do to create the magnetic cage,
stellarators rely on external coils.
The design of both tokamaks and stellarators is incredibly complex
of course,
but in theory,
tokamaks are more efficient,
which is why they have become the standard. However,
Stellarators have the potential to avoid a series of potential
design issues if they can be produced with the needed quality and precision.

The Germans have spent the last couple of decades working on the world’s largest stellarator.

After more than 1 million construction hours and a billion dollars, the huge machine is finally complete.

The 52 foot diameter stellarator called the W7-X required very precise construction and tolerances on parts,
but the machine now appears ready to go after more than a year of tests.

Very few stellarators have ever been built,
and the German model is the first real opportunity to test the design on a large scale.
If initial tests prove successful,

the Germans could upend the field of nuclear fusion and pave the
way for the start of a demonstration commercial fusion plant
sometime in the next decade. The device is scheduled to begin
full testing later this month, once it has received all necessary regulatory approval.

By Michael McDonald of http://www.Oilprice.com

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