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Power Science Technology

The Bizarre Reactor Scientists Hope Will Save Fusion Research (sciencemag.org) 223

sciencehabit writes: In a gleaming research lab in Germany's northeastern corner, researchers are preparing to switch on a fusion device called a stellarator, the largest ever built. The €1-billion machine, known as Wendelstein 7-X looks a bit like Han Solo's Millennium Falcon, towed in for repairs after a run-in with the Imperial fleet. Stellarators have long been dark horses in fusion energy research but the Dali-esque devices have many attributes that could make them much better prospects for a commercial fusion power plant than the more popular tokamaks: Once started, stellarators naturally purr along in a steady state and they are not prone to the potentially metal-bending magnetic disruptions that plague tokamaks. Unfortunately they are devilishly hard to build.
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The Bizarre Reactor Scientists Hope Will Save Fusion Research

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  • by turkeydance ( 1266624 ) on Thursday October 22, 2015 @08:23PM (#50784949)
    no...you didn't.....c'mon man.
    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward

      "Tokamak researchers HATE them!"

  • by khallow ( 566160 ) on Thursday October 22, 2015 @08:47PM (#50785045)
    So how are they heating up the plasma? The discussion of the comparison with the tokamak talks a lot about the instability of the latter, but not much about how they'll replace the heating mechanism (the pulsing of the plasma, is supposedly replaced with something more steady).
  • Just stop. (Score:5, Funny)

    by X0563511 ( 793323 ) on Thursday October 22, 2015 @08:59PM (#50785089) Homepage Journal

    looks a bit like Han Solo's Millennium Falcon, towed in for repairs after a run-in with the Imperial fleet.

    Sure, in the same way a croissant does.

    Meaning, not at all.

    • by Ecuador ( 740021 )

      looks a bit like Han Solo's Millennium Falcon, towed in for repairs after a run-in with the Imperial fleet.

      Sure, in the same way a croissant does.

      Meaning, not at all.

      OK, I'll give you that, it doesn't look like a croissant, but how about a cronut? Do you see it?

    • looks a bit like Han Solo's Millennium Falcon, towed in for repairs after a run-in with the Imperial fleet.

      Sure, in the same way a croissant does.

      Meaning, not at all.

      Now that you mention it, it kind of does look like a croissant.

    • looks a bit like Han Solo's Millennium Falcon, towed in for repairs after a run-in with the Imperial fleet.

      Sure, in the same way a croissant does.

      Meaning, not at all.

      Indeed! In every encounter I've seen between the Millennium Falcon and Imperial ships, whether it's dodging TIE fighters in an asteroid belt, playing tag with Imperial Star Destroyers, or tackling a Death Star, it's the Imperial ships that wind up being turned into scrap metal.

  • by SuperKendall ( 25149 ) on Thursday October 22, 2015 @09:09PM (#50785117)

    Whirr Whir Whir Whir CLUNK.

    "They told me they fixed it! It's not my fault!" as they furiously poke at buttons.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    They're just spinning in circles at this point.

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • Could the sale of the power from a ITER-like or W7X-like power plant pay better than 10% more than the interest on the capital used to build it added to the operating cost? (Assume the market is priced according to the cost of generating electricity from ALTERNATIVES to coal.)

        If not, I can't see fusion competing with energy alternatives..... No one would ever invest the money to build commercial fusion plants if you couldn't make sufficient profit on the invested capital.....

        --PeterM

        • Went and looked for answers to my own question:

          This report from DOE
          http://web.ornl.gov/~webworks/... [ornl.gov]

          has figures showing that they forecast the cost of fusion power to be between 68 to 80 "mill/kWh", (apparently mills are thousandth's of a 1999 dollar) which is more expensive than any alternative they examined. Wind power they forecast to cost between 20 to 40 "mill/kWh".

          If the people at DOE who wrote that report are good forecasters, then fusion is DOA. Alternatives will be less expensive.

          Yes, you can make "technology advancement" arguments that the DOE forecasters are wrong, but the cost of wind and solar generators are dropping all the time, too, and storage options might get radically cheaper as well. I think investment in solar + wind + storage actually dwarfs investments in fusion, so the market seems intent on fulfilling DOE's prophesy.

          Fusion may really only come into its own when we go live in the asteroid belt or the outer solar system.

          --PeterM

          • by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Friday October 23, 2015 @02:35AM (#50785805)

            Price has never been a good indicator of whether an energy source is viable. Especially not current price. If you suggest things like fracking or even oil sands to someone from the 70s he'd probably look at you like you're suggesting mining iron on the moon. Far too expensive to do, for there are far cheaper sources of oil.

            Just because something is cheap today doesn't mean it is going to be cheap tomorrow. Resources like coal, oil and gas are getting more and more expensive as the cheap sources run dry. Nuclear (fission) power may well jump in cost if countries decide that companies running them should be responsible for disasters and waste disposal. And wind and solar power are dependent on there being areas where putting them actually makes sense. Real estate can actually become the issue here in the future.

            Whether a power source is economically viable is by no means static.

            • by blindseer ( 891256 ) <blindseer.earthlink@net> on Friday October 23, 2015 @06:50AM (#50786255)

              Disasters and waste disposal issues for fission are only a concern if we keep doing it like we've done for the last 40 years. We've seen liquid fuel fission that promises to not only be "disaster" proof but can also "eat" the radioactive waste from the reactors we've used for decades.

              Liquid fuel fission reactors like liquid fluoride thorium reactors (LFTRs) can be made to be walkaway safe, where any damage would be limited to the destruction of the reactor. LFTRs have safety mechanisms that prevent the possibility of "China Syndrome" style meltdowns. This is primarily because the fuel is already melted, loss of containment means removal of the mechanisms that maintain fission. If the reactor runs too hot a normal "scram" operation involves dumping the core fuel into a drain tank that removes the fuel from the core, the tank is designed in such a way that just air cooling prevents further damage. Thermal failure of the core, as in it gets so hot that it melts, mean the fuel spills onto the floor of the reactor building, and then flows into that same drain tank. It is impossible for a LFTR failure to result in a massive release of radiation.

              Once the powers that be in the federal government realize the value of LFTR we will see fission not only get cheaper but also prove that fission does not mean we have to pile up radioactive waste. That "waste" we have now exists only because of federal government policies that prevent the reprocessing of spent fuel into new fuel and valuable industrial material. LFTR could prove to be a means for making reprocessing of "spent" fuel that is both economically and politically feasible. Much of what makes up "spent" fuel from current reactors is unburnt uranium, stuff that is no more radioactive than what was dug from the ground. If we can get that uranium out and turn it into something useful then not only have we just solve 90% of the "waste" problem but we've also solved an energy problem.

              There's two ways to dispose of radioactive waste. One way is to store it away until it decays, which can take hundreds of years. (Anything that takes longer than hundreds of years to decay is "radioactive" only in the theoretical sense, it's not a hazard to life.) Another way to dispose of radioactive material is in a reactor. If we do it right then that reactor can not only destroy radioactive material but we also get valuable energy from it.

              Like you say, if you ask someone from the 1970s about nuclear power they'll tell you about The China Syndrome. The reason we still think of fission power like we do in the 1970s is because not much has changed in fission technology since then. Why haven't we seen anything new in fission technology since the 1970s? Likely because we have the same people in the Department of Energy that we did in 1979. Time will prove that nuclear fission is safe, cheap, reliable, and the only option we have. That time may come, sadly, only because the people that are holding the technology back have died of old age.

            • by CaptainLard ( 1902452 ) on Friday October 23, 2015 @09:55AM (#50787127)

              Whether a power source is economically viable is by no means static.

              Can't argue that but this brings up an interesting question (for me anyway). What could make wind and solar more expensive in the future? The raw material costs are basically nothing compared to fossil fuels (where they are essentially basically 100%). There is plenty of silicon just lying around on the surface. Some of it may be easier to process but I think that problem is largely solved.

              I don't know what the global lithium supply looks like but I do know LiIon batteries can be recycled. The reason China has all the rare earth mines is because their government subsidized them to corner the market in the short term. Rare earths aren't really that rare.

              For wind you need resins and what not but again, the material input is minuscule compared to the lifetime energy output. You mentioned real estate and places that make sense....but there are a LOT of those places where it does make sense. Often the real estate is pretty cheap (deserts, etc) and hey, the solar panels covering just a little over 1/3 of my roof provide 110% of my yearly electricity use! (yeah storage...that's being resolved faster than even I thought it would)

              Given all that I know about wind and solar it seems that if anything, prices will only get cheaper.

              • What could make wind and solar more expensive in the future?

                Taxes as arbitrary support for deeply emplaced power sources such as coal and oil are one possibility. Contractor limitations and rules are another. Grid-tie requirements are another. Materials disposal is another. Licensing is another. Zoning is another. Etc.

                There is no technology that government cannot make more expensive, inconvenient, and less efficient than it needs to be.

          • by blindseer ( 891256 ) <blindseer.earthlink@net> on Friday October 23, 2015 @06:04AM (#50786177)

            Yes, you can make "technology advancement" arguments that the DOE forecasters are wrong, but the cost of wind and solar generators are dropping all the time, too, and storage options might get radically cheaper as well. I think investment in solar + wind + storage actually dwarfs investments in fusion, so the market seems intent on fulfilling DOE's prophesy.

            Wind and solar will never compete with coal and fission. Part of this is because wind and solar require viable (read that as cheap, reliable, etc) storage to provide 24/7 power. Any energy storage system that can make wind and solar reliable will also serve to make coal and fission cheaper.

            A big problem with any power plant that works by steam power, which coal and fission do, is that it does not respond well to large daily swings in power demands. To rectify this there are a large number of solutions, the most popular one because it is cheap is natural gas turbines. In this case "cheap" is relative because even though natural gas turbines cost three times that of coal and fission it is still the cheapest solution we have. Right now that is the same for wind and solar, to make wind and solar "work" there must be a ready reserve of natural gas turbines.

            If we develop a technology that can store energy cheaper than it takes to produce it by natural gas turbines then all we'd need to do to get cheap and reliable power is to couple that storage with coal and fission. To compete with that wind and solar would have to be a fraction of the cost of operating a coal or fission power plant. Why a fraction of the cost? Because coal and fission can operate with better than 80% up time. Wind and solar can only operate with something like 30% up time. To compete with a one GW fission power plant would require three GW capacity wind and/or solar, along with this as yet undeveloped storage technology that is cheaper than natural gas.

            I believe that after all the gains we've made in wind and solar in the last few decades we're seeing diminishing returns. We're getting real close to theoretical maximum efficiencies already, there just isn't much more room for improvement. If wind and solar require some cheap storage system to be viable then they are both fool's errands. While wind, solar, and storage are all noble efforts in solving our future energy needs none of them can compete with fission. Our future is a fission powered one, nothing else we've seen so far can compare, and that includes fusion.

            • Wind and solar will never compete with coal and fission. Part of this is because wind and solar require viable (read that as cheap, reliable, etc) storage to provide 24/7 power. Any energy storage system that can make wind and solar reliable will also serve to make coal and fission cheaper.

              No. Actually you don't need any viable storage, only viable power distribution network across the continent. Wind cannot stop blowing everywhere on the continent, no matter what. That's how Europe managed to get 10% of its electricity out of windmills in 2014.

              • by blindseer ( 891256 ) <blindseer.earthlink@net> on Friday October 23, 2015 @07:08AM (#50786289)

                Getting 10% of your electricity from wind is trivial. Daily demand varies more that 10% so all you have to do is what you've been doing for the current mix of coal, gas, nuclear, and hydro. People smarter than the both of us have spent a long time looking at this and have convinced me that having more than 30% of power from wind and strange things start to happen with the grid.

                We can make wind power work but it would involve massive changes to how the national power grid works, which would be very expensive. Not only would it be expensive, because putting large power cables over or under the Mississippi river is not easy, but it would create a vary fragile network. If there was a catastrophic loss of connection on one of those Mississippi crossings we'd see blackouts and brownouts nationwide.

                Even if we could power the world with wind we would not want to. Making wind power work means relying on wind in California to power a Florida with calm winds. There's a lot of ways that could fail, badly.

                Wind power, right now, costs three times what nuclear power costs, right now. Even a quantum leap in wind technology cannot make it cheaper than what nuclear fission could cost if only the Department of Energy would allow the building of a modern liquid fuel fission reactor. The Department of Energy has been subsidizing wind power for decades and it still cannot compete with fission power from the 1970s. I don't see a great future for wind power. Wind power will never go away, it's just too easy to get in many places, but it cannot power a first world economy.

                • by burbilog ( 92795 )

                  We can make wind power work but it would involve massive changes to how the national power grid works, which would be very expensive.

                  Upgrading power network is waaay cheaper than building huge amount of dams (while destroying huge amount of land). Or any flywheel or other SciFi madness. Recent surge in wind capacity factor (from 32% to 37% during this year alone) happened because of power network upgrade -- the better power network, the more electricity is shared across the country as needed.

                  Wind power, right now, costs three times what nuclear power costs, right now.

                  No. Recent BNEF report shows that wind electircity became cheapest power source in England and Germany without subsidies.

                  Even if we could power the world with wind we would not want to. Making wind power work means relying on wind in California to power a Florida with calm winds. There's a lot of ways that could fail, badly.

                  Wind can't fail everywhe

                  • by fyngyrz ( 762201 )

                    The Chernobyl installation used a flawed reactor design and was operated with inadequately trained personnel.

                    That is not the face of nuclear power. No one sane is suggesting building another reactor like Chernobyl.

                    Also, if someone wanted to use my back yard for a fission reactor using current designs, I'd be the happiest guy in town. Guaranteed.

                • > Wind power, right now, costs three times what nuclear power costs, right now

                  *sigh*

                  Every reference from the last couple of years says the exact opposite. EVERY one.

                  How can you possibly believe this? What sources are you reading that say this?

                • People smarter than the both of us have spent a long time looking at this and have convinced me that having more than 30% of power from wind and strange things start to happen with the grid.
                  Unfortunately those guys are either not smart or lying. because they are wrong ;D

                  The grid does not care where the powr comes from.

                  If you stard adding renewables you obviously have to take care for their variability.

                  Not only would it be expensive, because putting large power cables over or under the Mississippi river is

                • Wind is getting close to being cheap enough simply to safe on fuel for coal plants.

              • by khallow ( 566160 )

                Wind cannot stop blowing everywhere on the continent, no matter what.

                Except when it does. Sure, it'll be less common than for smaller regions, but there's evidence from Europe's experience that you can see significant becalming over a whole continent. Also, the local surpluses and deficits mean you either have to overbuild your grid in addition or put in enough local storage or variable generation/consumption to smooth out wind power variation.

            • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

              Wind and solar will never compete with coal and fission.
              But actually they do. In Germany coal planets get decomissioned because they can no longer compete.
              Part of this is because wind and solar require viable (read that as cheap, reliable, etc) storage to provide 24/7 power
              That is nonsense, as no country is running 24/7 with "full power", power is a curve with a lower bottom at somewhere between 40% and 60% of your peaks during daytime.

              A big problem with any power plant that works by steam power, which coa

              • by Zak3056 ( 69287 ) on Friday October 23, 2015 @09:39AM (#50787015) Journal

                Wind and solar will never compete with coal and fission.
                But actually they do. In Germany coal planets get decomissioned because they can no longer compete.

                The reason that coal is not competitive in Germany is because the playing field is severely tilted in favor of wind (wind power gets a premium price that is, IIRC, funded by fossil, and also has priority in the grid. If there is renewable available, the fossil plans have to spin down). That climate makes it absolutely uneconomical to run a large powerplant that is slow to respond to changes in supply and demand.

                Please note that I'm not saying this is necessarily a bad thing (though some of my German colleagues think the situation is untenable for various reasons), but your argument above is not nearly as simple as you frame it.

            • > Wind and solar will never compete with coal and fission. Part

              Which is funny, when one considers they are being installed faster than fission was at any time in history, and people are turning off their coal plants because they can't compete.

              I find it amazing the lengths that people will go to in order to avoid accepting the measurable facts that are staring them right in the face.

              > even though natural gas turbines cost three times that of coal and fission

              Natural gas turbines cost about 1/2 coal plan

        • For all of this, in the very best case W7X will only sustain fusion for thirty minutes (according to Wikipedia). That is an extremely long way from being practical.

          Even assuming it works very well, we are an extremely long way from solving all of the problems required to build a practical working fusion reactor.

          Some of the problems remaining to be solved:

          • Neutron flux (part 1). Most of the energy from the deuterium-tritium reaction is in the high-energy neutron produced by the reaction. The best estimate is that the neutron flux from a 1GW fusion reactor would be one or two orders of magnitude higher than from a fission reactor. No known material can withstand that neutron flux. One other way to look at it is that in five years of operation, every atomic nucleus in whatever radiation shield you build will be hit hundreds of times over a five year period.
          • Neutron flux (part 2). the deuterium-tritium reaction produces one neutron. That neutron has to (1) heat a working fluid that can be used to run a turbine, and (2) strike a lithium nucleus with enough energy to breed tritium. You need to do that with every damned neutron to have a self-sustaining system. This is made even more challenging by the fact that neutrons will be emitted isotropically from the reactor. Yes, there are materials that can act as neutron amplifiers, but no one has ever done that on a large scale and it probably won't be easy or simple.
          • Lithium. You are going to need a lot of it. A 1GW reactor will probably need around 10000 tons of lithium. At $7/kg, that is seventy billion dollars worth of lithium. That is also a significant percentage of the world's annual production of lithium.
          • Tritium. Once you've made the tritium from the lithium, you need to get it back into the plasma where it can do some good. I note that both tritium and lithium will easily react with each other and separating them will be tricky.
          • Helium removal. Your fusion reaction will produce helium. Too much helium in the plasma will interfere with the reaction and lower the efficiency of the reactor. You need a system to get the helium out of the plasma without cooling it down. This system must operate continuously.
          • Scaling. W7X has a plasma volume of around 30 cubic meters. A 1GW fusion plant would need a plasma volume on the order of 1000 cubic meters. W7X will cost around a billion dollars -- straight-up extrapolation implies a cost north of 30 billion dollars. That doesn't include all of the systems described above or a turbine to actually generate electricity. I also point out that scaling up isn't necessarily cheaper either.

          I'd also note that solving each of the above problems is not going to be cheap. It is hard to imagine how a fusion plant can be made for less money than an existing fission plant, and those plants are already not competitive. Chances are it would be better and cheaper to build lots of batteries with all that lithium and a lot of wind turbines and solar panels. That would get you the same amount of energy, probably.

          Sources: matter2energy [wordpress.com], Do The Math [ucsd.edu]

          • I messed up, 10000 tons of lithium will cost roughly seventy million dollars. However, since you need "enriched" lithium with more Li-6 a price north of $100/kg is probably more realistic, which still puts you in the billion-dollar range on how much your lithium blanket is going to cost.

            • I messed up, 10000 tons of lithium will cost roughly seventy million dollars. However, since you need "enriched" lithium with more Li-6 a price north of $100/kg is probably more realistic, which still puts you in the billion-dollar range on how much your lithium blanket is going to cost.

              Yeah, and also "1000 cubic meters" is more accurately called "a cubic kilometer". Yeah.

              • 1000m^3 = 10^-6 km^3

                You're way off and I recommend you take an hour to learn how to deal with powers of units.

              • by Zak3056 ( 69287 )

                Yeah, and also "1000 cubic meters" is more accurately called "a cubic kilometer". Yeah.

                Even more accurately, it's 1/1000000th of a cubic kilometer.


              • Yeah, and also "1000 cubic meters" is more accurately called "a cubic kilometer". Yeah.

                No it is not. A "cubic kilometer" is 1km * 1km * 1km = 1000 * 1000 * 1000 cubic meters = 1billion cubic meters.

          • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday October 22, 2015 @11:29PM (#50785473)

            The bullet points where you give numbers make no sense. 10000 tons of lithium? Design studies for DEMO, which would have several GW of thermal output, have a blanket volume on the order of 500 m^3. Even if assuming that was all lithium, you are talking about 300-400 tons, much smaller than 10000 tons. 10000 tons would be a block of lithium about 27 m on a side, which is much larger than the whole reactor vessel design.

            Scaling the costs is very difficult to do. A production reactor would be far cheaper in many ways, because you don't need as much diagnostic access. A lot of compromises have to be made to just get enough space between the magnets of many designs for diagnostics, plus the costs of diagnostics (millions of dollars each for the many of them), plus the costs to use, maintain and analyse them. This is part of why designs for DEMO are only about 15% larger than ITER, but of a much more compact design considering it is producing nearly 4-8 times as much thermal output.

            • You're right. That is still a heck of a lot of enriched lithium. I got my numbers from skimming my sources.

              I still think there is no guarantee that scaling up will necessarily be less expensive. New engineering problems are likely to arise as you scale up. And yes, while you will not need as much instrumentation in a production reactor, there is a lot of stuff a production reactor will need (like the ability to run more than thirty minutes) that isn't included in that cost. My own guess is that it will

            • My point is that there are a lot of daunting challenges to building a reliable commercial-scale fusion plant. They are probably all solvable. It is an open question whether you can solve all of those problems and produce a competitive source of electricity. For myself, I doubt it.

          • All of these are engeneering challenges and not insurmoutable barriers. Each and everyone of them has been studied and solutions proposed (how to handle the neutron flux, what materials to use, how to remove helium and how to make an efficient blanket of Lithium to assure self sustainable fueling starting from raw deuterium and lithium.
            These will all be sought out an tested on Iter and then Demo.

          • Could you briefly explain why a 1 GW reactor would need 10.000 tons of Lithium?

            thanks in advance

          • A nice summary except for the turbine part.
            A fusion plant is supposed to generate electricity directly via the magneto hydrodynamic effect.
            Considering that the plasma is magnetic confined I wonder how difficult that would be in practice ;D

          • Magnetized Target Fusion, such as is being developed by the Canadian company General Fusion [generalfusion.com], solves all these problems.You surround a microscopic amount of tritium and deuterium in a sphere, filled with a molten bath of metal, and hit the outsides of it with computer-controlled hammers. Properly calibrated, the shockwaves concentrate in the center to briefly allow fusion conditions to occur. All the neutron energy is absorbed by the molten metal, causing absolutely no damage to the machine. So it can actua

        • by Jeremi ( 14640 )

          These machines aren't meant to be the Boeing 747 of fusion power. They're more like the Wright Flyer [wikipedia.org] -- which was not even close to being a commercially viable flying machine, but did demonstrate that heavier-than-air flight was possible, and provided the engineers with experience that helped them engineer the next generation of aircraft.

          • We knew heavier than air flight was possible LONG before the Wright brothers got involved.
            • We knew heavier than air flight was possible LONG before the Wright brothers got involved.

              There's a big difference between knowing something is possible, and actually doing it.

              • There's a big difference between knowing something is possible, and actually doing it.

                In 1848, Sir George Cayley built a glider that carried a child, years before the Wright brothers were even born.

                In 1856, Frenchman Jean-Marie Le Bris made the first flight higher than his point of departure, by having his glider "L'Albatros artificiel" pulled by a horse on a beach. He reportedly achieved a height of 100 meters, over a distance of 200 meters.

                In 1877, Enrico Forlanini developed an unmanned helicopter powered by a steam engine. It rose to a height of 13 meters, where it remained for some 2

            • Birds did too.

            • And we know that fusion is possible too.

              Look up. Look way up... See the glowing ball of fire in the sky?

      • by khallow ( 566160 )

        When ITER ignites a plasma early next decade

        Still not going to cut it. You have to substantially reduce the cost as well. That means either figuring out how to do the fancy tech cheaper, or more likely redo the whole mess with technology that is more affordable.

        Progress has actually been staggering -- the state-of-the-art in fusion triple-product has grown faster than Moore's Law for decades.

        Still could have been faster if we were serious about it.

      • That's what you think.

        When ITER ignites a plasma early next decade, people will be completely blindsided.

        Don't worry. The US will have ground troops go in long before that happens.

    • Yup post it anonymously, so you won't be accountable as one of the people trying to derail fusion. Fools like you used to claim space travel and airplanes were impossible because of all the failures that came before it was successful. We have ITER, MagLIF, and loads of other promising concepts left to try.

      Post a proof that fusion is impossible and then maybe we'll listen. You know a proof is something other than "fusion didn't work when we cut the budget by 90%".
      We know fusion is possible not only because

  • by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Thursday October 22, 2015 @09:32PM (#50785177) Journal
    Lots of curves in the construction, and

    Wendelstein 7-X’s bizarrely shaped components must be put together with millimeter precision. All welding was computer controlled and monitored with laser scanners.

  • looks a bit like Han Solo's Millennium Falcon, towed in for repairs after a run-in with the Imperial fleet.

    So, it's round.

    A lot of words to use to say that.

  • by Maury Markowitz ( 452832 ) on Friday October 23, 2015 @08:07AM (#50786469) Homepage

    It makes no difference if this device "works" or not, no one will use it commercially.

    That's because the cost of the equipment needed to extract the energy from the system costs only a little less then an entire wind farm producing the same amount of energy. This problem effects any heat engine type source, including coal and fission, which is why no one is building these any more. Natural gas turbines, hydro, wind and PV do not have this portion of the system. These sources have always been, or recently scaled down to, prices points below the older sources.

    There's really not a lot of math involved, and people have been running the numbers since the 1970s. In spite of repeated statements from the power industry that they're not interested, the fusion field keeps sending out press reports like this one about how they're going to save the world. Meanwhile wind and PV are the two fastest growing power sources in history, and by the time any of these devices work the grid will have already completed its switch.

    A small number of know-nothings will now protest something about direct conversion in aneutronic systems, ignoring the fact that not one such device has come within multiple orders of magnitude of working, and we have very good reason to believe they never will.

    Others will protest that wind can't do X and Y, and in this case they're absolutely right. But unfortunately they don't pay for the construction. The banks actually pay for the construction, and they're giving all the money to the wind farms regardless of X and Y.

    If you want to run the numbers yourself, I wrote down some of them a couple of years ago: https://matter2energy.wordpress.com/2012/10/26/why-fusion-will-never-happen/

    • Wind and PV are intermittent, controlled fusion (should it ever reach financially viable over-unity energy production) is on demand.

      Still, I think at this point I'd rather see work go into a space-based PV system beaming power down to rectenna farms.

  • Frankly it looks like the golden age of Fusion Research.
    Lockheed's High Beta Fusion reactor. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
    The Polywell Fusion reactor. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org].
    ITER https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

    Seem to me that there is a lot of research in this area. If any of them work then things get really interesting.

  • If they do get this thing working, the flat-earth lobby will still find a way to stop it.

  • It does seem to bare a striking resemblance to this:
    http://images.static-bluray.co... [static-bluray.com]
    and this:
    http://sayforward.com/sites/de... [sayforward.com]
    and eventually this:
    https://cinema1544.files.wordp... [wordpress.com]
    leading to this:
    https://unshavedmouse.files.wo... [wordpress.com]

    Hope it works out well! :)

  • You know you're in the future when you see greebles [wikipedia.org].

Love may laugh at locksmiths, but he has a profound respect for money bags. -- Sidney Paternoster, "The Folly of the Wise"

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