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Power

MIT Designs Less Expensive Fusion Reactor That Boosts Power Tenfold 337

jan_jes writes: Advances in magnet technology have enabled researchers at MIT to propose a new design for a practical compact tokamak (donut-shaped) fusion reactor. The stronger magnetic field makes it possible to produce the required magnetic confinement of the superhot plasma — that is, the working material of a fusion reaction — but in a much smaller device than those previously envisioned (abstract). The reduction in size, in turn, makes the whole system less expensive and faster to build, and also allows for some ingenious new features in the power plant design.
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MIT Designs Less Expensive Fusion Reactor That Boosts Power Tenfold

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  • by ClickOnThis ( 137803 ) on Tuesday August 11, 2015 @05:52PM (#50297399) Journal

    From T(first)FA: the major radius is 3.3 m and the minor radius is 1.1 m.

    • Whoops, make that T(second)FA, i.e., the abstract.

    • by vux984 ( 928602 ) on Tuesday August 11, 2015 @06:00PM (#50297473)

      "Smaller, but still pretty big"

      Down from 5m and 2m. That's substantial progress.

      • Down from 5m and 2m. That's substantial progress.

        Agreed.

      • by Rei ( 128717 ) on Tuesday August 11, 2015 @06:40PM (#50297717) Homepage

        It really could be a game changer. REBCO tapes are still pretty expensive but their prices should drop to competitive levels when scaled up. This could cut costs 1/2 to 1 order of magnitude for the same amount of power generation. And beyond that, smaller reactors are much easier to get funds to build, and are more useful in that they can supply power to smaller markets.

        The "30 years" joke is annoying; the amount of advancement that's been occurring has been huge. But the projects are so big and expensive that you don't go through iterations very fast. So again the ability to "scale down" is a massive benefit.

      • It's only progress if it works. The field of fusion has a well established track record of reactor designs that do not work when built for one reason or another. I'll get excited when they have demonstrated that it works and not before.
    • Hardly a Mr Fusion, but about the same size as one of the generators at Glen Canyon.

  • by gweihir ( 88907 ) on Tuesday August 11, 2015 @05:55PM (#50297431)

    Still, it is good that research in that area is still ongoing. We need to find out pretty soon whether this planet has to go all-renewable in order to survive. Working fusion within the foreseeable future would be very much desirable.

  • by GPS Pilot ( 3683 ) on Tuesday August 11, 2015 @07:31PM (#50297985)

    Tokamaks are so unworkable that even a tenfold improvement leaves them wanting. My money's on Lockheed's design: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

  • The real question is: will fusion achieve real energy production before our civilization collapse because of power source exhaustionN
    • by dbIII ( 701233 )

      The real question is: will fusion achieve real energy production before our civilization collapse because of power source exhaustionN

      Considering how much coal and uranium there is, let alone wind, solar, hydro, wave, tidal, geothermal etc, such a thing is so far off as to be ignorable for a few generations. Handy to use liquid fuel is a different story which a lack of makes transport more expensive, but there's a lot of other energy production.

  • It would be interesting to compute what the effect of using this tape, rather than copper windings, would have on the scale of Bussard's/EMC2's polywell [polywellnu...fusion.com] fusion machine prototypes. The Polywell is essentially a big gassy vacuum tube that produces fusion-powered electricity from hydrogen and boron.

    The proposed 100 MW machine is 3 meters (about 6 1/2 feet) in diameter - because the scaling rules (5th power) include both volume and mag field strength, which both go by power laws (3rd and 4th respectively) of t

  • Never mind things that already work such as, wind and solar, as well as things that likely will such tidal pools.
    Put all your money in something that m-i-g-h-t someday work.

  • Still gonna make waste.

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