German
scientists have just switched on the Wendelstein 7-X (W7X) stellarator -
the largest nuclear fusion machine of its kind - to successfully
produce and sustain hydrogen plasma for the first time.
Why is this such a big deal? The production of hydrogen plasma is key to harnessing the clean, limitless energy of nuclear fusion - the process that powers our Sun. If we can achieve controlled nuclear fusion, it would quite literally change the world, because it would replace fossil fuels and nuclear fission facilities as a cheaper, more efficient, and more sustainable source of energy.
Why is this such a big deal? The production of hydrogen plasma is key to harnessing the clean, limitless energy of nuclear fusion - the process that powers our Sun. If we can achieve controlled nuclear fusion, it would quite literally change the world, because it would replace fossil fuels and nuclear fission facilities as a cheaper, more efficient, and more sustainable source of energy.
"It’s a very clean source of
power, the cleanest you could possibly wish for. We’re not doing this
for us, but for our children and grandchildren," one of the team,
physicist John Jelonnek from the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, told
the Associated Press.
Nuclear fission, which is what our current
nuclear facilities achieve, generates energy by splitting the nucleus
of an atom into smaller neutrons and nuclei. While fission is super
efficient - the amount of energy it releases is millions of times more
efficient per mass than that of coal - it requires very careful (and
costly) management of dangerous radioactive waste.
Nuclear
fusion, on the other hand, produces huge amounts of energy when atoms
are fused together at incredibly high temperatures - but produces no
radioactive waste or other unwanted byproducts.
On top of that,
nuclear fusion has been fuelling our Sun for the past 4.5 billion years,
which means if we can harness it, humanity is pretty much set for its
energy needs for as long as we’re in existence. But that's a big "if",
because scientists have been working on this for more than six decades
now, and are still dealing with some very significant hurdles.
One
of the many problems with achieving controlled nuclear fusion is that
we actually have to recreate conditions inside the Sun - so, build a
machine that’s capable of producing and manipulating a
100-million-degree-Celsius (180 million degrees Fahrenheit) ball of
plasma gas.
Back in November, researchers at Germany's Max Planck
Institute for Plasma Physics switched on their billion-dollar
stellerator for the first time, and successfully produced super-hot
blobs of helium plasma. This was the first time the stellarator was
shown to produce and sustain plasma gas just as well as competing
nuclear fusion machines.
Helium was great as a proof of concept,
but hydrogen releases a whole lot more energy - it also happens to be a
whole lot harder to heat.
But the team reported earlier today
that using just 2 megawatts of microwave radiation, they were able to
heat hydrogen gas to 80 million degrees for a quarter of a second. This
might not sound like much, but again, it’s a proof of concept, and the
team says they’re conceivably able to scale things up to heat the
hydrogen gas to that 100 million degree benchmark, and also sustain the
resulting plasma for much longer.
"Experiments with hydrogen
plasma will continue until March when protective carbon tiles and a
divertor for the elimination of impurities will be mounted inside the
reactor vessel," Alexander Hellemans reports for Spectrum IEEE. "The
microwave plasma heating power will then be increased to 20 megawatts,
allowing plasmas to last as long as 30 minutes."
The team says
that the W-X stellerator isn’t actually designed to produce useable
amounts of energy via nuclear fusion - its role is to simply prove that
it can be done. "In a later phase of W-X, starting in 2019, we will use
deuterium and we will get fusion reactions, but not enough to get more
energy out than we are putting in," one of the team, Hans-Stephan Bosch,
told Hellemans, adding that there are no plans to add tritium to the
hydrogen plasma to break even.
Watch this space, because these
are really exciting times, now that the W-X is officially competing with
the ITER - a huge nuclear fusion reactor in France that's also managed
to trap plasma long enough for fusion to occur. We can't wait to see
what happens in March.
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