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Power Businesses The Almighty Buck Technology

Nuclear Fusion Startup Raises $100 Million To Design and Build a Demo Power Plant (bloomberg.com) 141

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Bloomberg: A nuclear fusion start-up backed by billionaire Jeff Bezos raised more than $100 million to help design and build a demonstration power plant. The company lined up $65 million in Series E financing led by Singapore's Temasek Holdings Pte, and is getting another $38 million from Canada's Strategic Innovation Fund, General Fusion Inc. said in a statement Monday. It's now attracted more than $200 million in financing.

Canada-based General Fusion is one of about two dozen companies seeking to commercialize nuclear fusion technology. It relies on the same process that powers stars, generating huge amounts of energy by fusing small atoms into larger ones. While it holds out the promise of cheap, carbon-free energy, researchers have been working for decades to overcome significant technical hurdles. Firms pursuing such designs are hoping they can start generating power sooner than the 35-nation, $25 billion Tokamak fusion reactor known as ITER. Collaborators on that facility -- the largest research project in history -- have been laboring on a gigantic demonstration reactor in France since 2010.

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Nuclear Fusion Startup Raises $100 Million To Design and Build a Demo Power Plant

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  • Advantages:

    Fusion doesn't generate poison, as do coal and nuclear power plants.

    Fusion could generate cheap power that helps solve the problem of global warming caused by humans. All cars will eventually be electric; electric cars are far easier to maintain.
    • by smoot123 ( 1027084 ) on Monday December 16, 2019 @08:34PM (#59526592)

      Fusion doesn't generate poison, as do coal and nuclear power plants.

      Could. Or might not. It's going to depend on the actual design (which there are no commercially-viable ones yet). Last I heard (and this was years ago), they were concerned about the affect of all the neutrons on the reaction chamber, turning it either brittle or toxic. But that was for old (at this point) designs, perhaps they have a way to address it.

      Until we have something close to working, it's all going to be "could", "might", and "ought". Nothing is a given.

      • by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Monday December 16, 2019 @09:21PM (#59526734)

        DT fusion emits neutrons. Just a lot fewer than fission reactors.

        Most plans have a lithium blanket to absorb the neutrons, absorb the heat, and generate tritium to sustain the reaction.

        There are aneutronic fusion reactions, including He3+D, He3+He3 and Boron+D. All of these require far higher ignition energy than DT.

        Aneutronic fusion [wikipedia.org].

        Bottom line: DT fusion is the only plausible reaction for now. It produces neutrons, but not much. There is very little long term waste. There is no danger of meltdown. Keeping a fusion reaction going is like keeping a candle lit in a category five hurricane.

        • Bottom line: DT fusion is the only plausible reaction for now. It produces neutrons, but not much.
          Define "not much"?

          It is enough that the reactor building needs to be evacuated when an experiment is run ... are you trying to step into blindseers steps?

      • by Futurepower(R) ( 558542 ) on Monday December 16, 2019 @09:41PM (#59526800) Homepage
        Parent comment: "... concerned about the effect of all the neutrons on the reaction chamber, turning it either brittle or toxic."

        Agreement: Fusion reactors: Not what they’re cracked up to be. [thebulletin.org] (April 19, 2017)

        "... neutron streams lead directly to four regrettable problems with nuclear energy: radiation damage to structures; radioactive waste; the need for biological shielding; and the potential for the production of weapons-grade plutonium 239 — thus adding to the threat of nuclear weapons proliferation, not lessening it, as fusion proponents would have it."
      • by necro81 ( 917438 )

        Last I heard (and this was years ago), they were concerned about the affect of all the neutrons on the reaction chamber, turning it either brittle or toxic.

        In the case of General Fusion [generalfusion.com] - the company referenced in the article* - their fusion chamber is made from a spinning blanket of molten metal. The metal absorbs the radiation and heat, and gets circulated through a heat exchanger to generate steam. This also presents an opportunity for continuous refinement and purification of the metal mix, to sepa

    • The article referenced in this Slashdot story does not mention why the new investors think they can succeed. Is there some new understanding? What system will they use?

      New idea about creating fusion: Nuclear fusion on brink of being realised, say MIT scientists [theguardian.com] (Mar. 9, 2018)

      Quoting from that story:

      "The project, a collaboration between scientists at MIT and a private company, will take a radically different approach to other efforts to transform fusion from an expensive science experiment into a vi
      • by mbkennel ( 97636 ) on Monday December 16, 2019 @08:52PM (#59526662)
        Commonwealth Fusion Systems (out of MIT) and General Fusion have substantially different mechanisms for fusion confinement.

        CFS is magnetic confinement fusion, essentially a tokamak, but using a new generation of superconducting magnets that are stable in higher field strengths than before. The physics and scaling of the plasma in these conditions is rather well understood. Fusion is continuous. If the magnets can be built to specification and cost, then success is highly probable.

        General Fusion is using cyclical fusion: magnetic confinement of a plasma followed by compression with acoustic pistons. The physics and scaling is much newer and less understood than the tokamak. That's a disadvantage and an advantage----more chance to fail far below necessary power range with novel misconfinement problems being discovered upon scaling, mostly likely turbulent fluid mechanical problems (this is what hurt conventional fusion for decades, new problems turning up). OTOH as it's less explored, if there are no problems then the scale-up might turn out to be much easier.
        • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

          by Anonymous Coward

          Using atoms to try to push nuclei together is innmerate. The forces that hold a mostly empty space atom together aren't a patch on what's required to push two nuclei together far closer than any two atoms ever are in any state of matter yet known. The nuclei are just going to squirt between the lead atoms with ease before they even get close. Not that magnetics are for sure the answer. The neutron activation problem is very real, and it's kind of hard to find new entries on the well established periodic

          • Using atoms to try to push nuclei together is innmerate. The forces that hold a mostly empty space atom together aren't a patch on what's required to push two nuclei together far closer than any two atoms ever are in any state of matter yet known. The nuclei are just going to squirt between the lead atoms with ease before they even get close.

            They're not using atoms to push nuclei together. They're
            * using atoms of a metal
            * to carry their conduction-band electons
            * (which form a contin

          • You do know they're producing neutrons today, right? I'm guessing you don't even know what that sentence means though.
          • by mbkennel ( 97636 )
            The "National Ignition Facility" for ICF has no real bearing on fusion designs for energy production. It's a nuclear weapons program, experimental testing of the basic physics of ignition of the secondary in thermonuclear weapons, which is the most complex and difficult problem (and for which there is no open published literature).

            The lasers ionize the hohlraum (enclosing metallic object) which make x-rays. In the H-bomb these would be provided as blackbody radiation from the very hot primary a moment aft
      • by jythie ( 914043 )
        Hype? Investors are generally going to lack the background to actually evaluate how feasible the projects are, but once you get one enthusiastic startup making such claims you are bound to get a bunch of them, and when a bunch of companies all claim to be able to do something all around the same time, that makes them look more legitimate to investors, after that you just need to leverage the fear of missing out.
    • by Roger W Moore ( 538166 ) on Monday December 16, 2019 @09:12PM (#59526708) Journal

      Fusion doesn't generate poison, as do coal and nuclear power plants.

      Technically this design will since it uses a spinning spherical shell of molten lead and lithium to compress the plasma, trigger fusion and absorb the energy and neutrons produced. It's an extremely clever design that I really hope they can get working but it is going to make the already toxic lead radioactive. However, you can use the lead over and over again and it is easily contained since, without lots of heat it will become solid so unlike coal or fission plants there is little to no risk to the environment.

      • However, you can use the lead over and over again and it is easily contained since, without lots of heat it will become solid so unlike coal or fission plants there is little to no risk to the environment.

        That's true. Now tell that to the knuckleheads that want to ban lead based ammunition. Elemental lead is quite inert, it's the lead oxides and salts that occur naturally and in consumer products like batteries and old paint (or new paint from China) that are toxic. Highly divided elemental lead, such as what might occur in an industrial setting that recycles or refines lead, or in bullet fragments in game meat, will raise the bio-availability of lead. This can be addressed with removal of the contaminat

        • Re: (Score:2, Flamebait)

          by Cyberax ( 705495 )

          That's true. Now tell that to the knuckleheads that want to ban lead based ammunition. Elemental lead is quite inert

          Not quite enough. And lost bullets are also a problem. And I don't understand why improvements in environment cause Republicans' such angst. Is it insecurity? Fear? Small penis?

          Especially since copper bullets work perfectly fine.

          • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

            by blindseer ( 891256 )

            Not quite enough. And lost bullets are also a problem. And I don't understand why improvements in environment cause Republicans' such angst. Is it insecurity? Fear? Small penis?

            It's the realization that the goal of the lead bans was not environmental protection, but to discourage firearm ownership.

            The evidence of the use of lead bullets causing the poisoning of, wild birds and wild mammals, (or people that eat them) is inconclusive unless the animal was actually shot. This was shown with wild birds showing up with lead poisoning long after bans on lead ammunition were enforced.

            I'm having trouble finding a good source right now but there have been studies showing lead poisoning in

            • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

              by Cyberax ( 705495 )

              I am armed because I am free. I am free because I am armed.

              BTW, you are free because brave people in Deep State work hard to keep it that way. Your pathetic penis extender does nothing to keep you free.

            • In the Eldorado national forest near me, in many areas the entire floor of the forest is covered in shotgun shells every couple of inches. The reason ammunition needs extra regulation is that gun owners are utterly irresponsible and don't care what they do to society. Call me when people litter pennies and wires in that kind of quantity and we'll talk about doing something about those.

              • In the Eldorado national forest near me, in many areas the entire floor of the forest is covered in shotgun shells every couple of inches.

                That's irrelevant to the discussion of lead in the environment.

                The reason ammunition needs extra regulation is that gun owners are utterly irresponsible and don't care what they do to society.

                Ammunition is already highly regulated. And littering is illegal. What do you propose? Making this already illegal behavior "more illegal"?

                Call me when people litter pennies and wires in that kind of quantity and we'll talk about doing something about those.

                I'll do that. Then you can explain how passing more laws against litter is supposed to stop people that are breaking existing laws on littering.

        • Elemental lead is quite inert

          In fact, it is so inert that it is actually used as flashing on church roofs in Europe. Some of it has been there for centuries.

          • But it is not inert when it gets into your body ... people should try to learn the differences between A and B and not always proclaim it is just A.

        • Now tell that to the knuckleheads that want to ban lead based ammunition.

          If I can't throw out an old CRT TV or monitor because they say that lead might leach out of the glass tube in a sealed sanitary landfill, then damned straight they should ban people from spraying lead bullets and pellets willy-nilly all over the landscape.

          This can be addressed with removal of the contaminated portion of meat from a hunted animal, enforcement against leaving killed vermin where scavengers could consume them, and proper construction of firing ranges.

          Given the number of stop signs and other roadside targets out in the boondocks that have already been turned into Swiss cheese by the not-so-well regulated militia, I don't think trying to enforce anything after distributing lead ammunition to the average

          • If I can't throw out an old CRT TV or monitor because they say that lead might leach out of the glass tube in a sealed sanitary landfill, then damned straight they should ban people from spraying lead bullets and pellets willy-nilly all over the landscape.

            That's lead oxide in the glass, it's soluble in water. Lead in ammunition is in metallic form, which is not soluble in water. This insolubility is demonstrated in the use of lead weights for fishing.

            Given the number of stop signs and other roadside targets out in the boondocks that have already been turned into Swiss cheese by the not-so-well regulated militia, I don't think trying to enforce anything after distributing lead ammunition to the average Joe would have much benefit.

            That sounds like a local problem. I don't see that around here. It's also irrelevant to the issue at hand, the threat metallic lead poses to the environment. Banning lead bullets won't stop people from shooting at road signs, or prevent any other illegal behavior you can think up to pin on gun owners.

            If you

            • That's lead oxide in the glass, it's soluble in water.

              But it leaches out of glass slowly enough so that they still use it to make tableware.

              Lead in ammunition is in metallic form, which is not soluble in water. This insolubility is demonstrated in the use of lead weights for fishing.

              Lead is a reactive enough to form soluble compounds in the environment. That's why lead fishing weights have already been banned in some areas.

              Banning lead bullets won't stop people from shooting at road signs, or prevent any other illegal behavior you can think up to pin on gun owners.

              But it will prevent people from shooting *lead* at road signs.

              • But it leaches out of glass slowly enough so that they still use it to make tableware.

                Um, no.
                https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

                Lead is a reactive enough to form soluble compounds in the environment. That's why lead fishing weights have already been banned in some areas.

                One stupid ban on lead doesn't mean we need another stupid lead ban.

                But it will prevent people from shooting *lead* at road signs.

                Right, so they will then be shooting bullets made of a material more likely to create sparks and start wildfires. On the balance I'm thinking that using lead is still preferable.
                https://wildfiretoday.com/2013... [wildfiretoday.com]

                Shooting at road signs is bad enough, shooting at road signs and starting wildfires only makes this worse.

              • But it leaches out of glass slowly enough so that they still use it to make tableware.
                Forbidden in Europe since probably 40 years, because: it is not slow enough. Especially if you drink wine from a lead glass bowl.

                Blindseer is just an idiot ...

    • not true, any fusion reaction we are likely to use for power produces neutrons which activate things, makes them radioactive. Also, the neutron field causes structural embrittlment.

      I'll laugh in the face of anyone who suggests we're going to use aneutronic fusion such as boron -proton, that requires ten times the temperature! (yes, on absolute temperature scale we can say such things, about 6.6 billion kelvin).

      • not true, any fusion reaction we are likely to use for power produces neutrons which activate things, makes them radioactive.

        Correct but this general fusion design absorbs almost all the neutrons in a spinning sphere of molten lead, laced with lithium. The lithium is an extremely good neutron absorber and has the bonus of generating tritium afterwards which is one component of the fuel needed to run the reactor.

        Since the lead is liquid it cannot become brittle and it can also easily be continuously replaced by circulation and the decay products of any activated lead nuclei removed from the mixture (this will have to be done t

        • tritium generators themselves are sources of environmental pollutions (e.g. CANDU reactors and also national labs such as Fermilab have run afoul of EPA and state guidlines)

          the activated lead (and other products as the lead won't be pure) will be a problem too

          In short, DT fusion reactors will make radioactive poisons, just less than a fission reactor

  • I thought the idea turned cold a few decades back.

    Has climate change warmed it up again?

    • Energy sales control much of foreign policy and a good fraction of various economies. The power companies fight solar/wind, and so snacking on that revenue seems to be attractive.

    • No point in being subtle. Slashdot ain't what it used to be.

      Cold Fusion [acs.org]

      • > No point in being subtle. Slashdot ain't what it used to be.

        Oh, we get it just fine, it just wasn't as clever or funny as you thought it was.

        =Smidge=

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      It did not. It is just _known_ that a lot of fundamental works is still needed. For progress, look, for example, at the Wendelstein X-7. Prospects are pretty good, but this is decidedly long-term prospects as in 30-50 years and maybe more.

      But this scam here is just to separate the clueless rich from their money.

  • Yes, nuclear fusion power is now just 10 years away... as it has been since 1965.

    Sigh!

    • It could just be delayed stop trying to derail it. It seems you are terribly uninformed, because scientists/engineers have actually made a lot of progress towards fusion between then and now. The yield rates have dramatically improved since the 1960s. We'll get fusion eventually in spite of your efforts to stop it. Your ancestors were the ones saying we'll never have flying machines too. Remember that? How did that work out?

      If we were making zero progress, you may have some cause for skepticism .. but the m

      • As with perpetual motion... we are 95% of the way there so... any day now :-/

      • If you hit my perpetual motion jetpack with your fusion powered flying car I'm gunna due your ass into the ground, mother fucker!
      • I lost interest in this topic a decade ago, so I'm not up to date. Has anyone built a fusion reactor that produces more energy than you put in to it?

        • by jabuzz ( 182671 )

          Yes Q>1.0 was achieved some time ago (if you use Tritium). The problem is that to close the loop (use the energy from the fusion to generate the power need to keep the fusion going) Q needs to be much larger than one. You need a Q=5 for the plasma to become self heating and even more if you are going to generate electricity. ITER is shooting for a Q of 10, and DEMO would be Q=25.

      • Judging by his user name, he might be skeptical of modern physics.

      • "It seems you are terribly uninformed"

        Maybe he is, maybe he isn't. I, however, could not be accused of that.

        "The yield rates have dramatically improved since the 1960s"

        Let's say you wanted to put man on the Moon. So you think, maybe I'll build a ladder.

        So you make a 10 foot tall ladder. Unfortunately, you find the Moon is more than 10 feet away.

        So you build a 20 foot tall ladder.

        Now, you can say, with all honesty, that you are twice as close to the Moon as you used to be. AMAZING PROGRESS!

        "If we were makin

      • by gweihir ( 88907 )

        There is significant progress. There is also a massive amount of things to still find out in plasma physics, material sciences, and some other relevant tech. For example, the Wendelstein X7 hat to wait for computer to become fast enough to allow the design simulations needed for its magnetic field design.

        Working, efficient, ready-to-be-industrialized fusion is not going to materialize in the next few decades, but it is pretty clear that if research continue it will eventually get there.

    • Yes, nuclear fusion power is now just 10 years away... as it has been since 1965.

      Actually the usual number that has been quoted for the past ~60 years is that it is 40 years away. If it is only 10 years away now then perhaps in another 20 we might have it!

      • Nah... apparently it's now just 15 years away: https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2018/mar/09/nuclear-fusion-on-brink-of-being-realised-say-mit-scientists

    • no, fusion power is 8 minutes away. always has been.

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      Yes, nuclear fusion power is now just 10 years away... as it has been since 1965.

      Sigh!

      When you ask actual scientists, that never was the case. It was always, "We think we will get there, but the time-frame is open" or some variant.

  • Windmills work. Solar panels work.
    • Hydro works too. But there isn't enough of it, and it isn't in all the places we need it to be.

      Fusion would be a real game-changer, bringing much of the promise that fission was expected to bring in the mid-20th century. ....maybe.

    • Windmills work. Solar panels work.

      Not on a calm night. However, put that proverbial drop of water from the bucket into a fusion reactor and one litre of such drops generates as much energy as 500 litres of petrol at any time of day or night and in any wind condition but without any green house gas emission.... and that's just from fusing the deuterium. If we can ever make a fusion reactor that fuses hydrogen itself (which is a lot harder) that number goes way up.

    • So do bicycles hooked to batteries, get riding!
    • by necro81 ( 917438 )

      A drop in the Bucket for an Impractical Project. Windmills work. Solar panels work.

      On the scale of total spending on energy production - hell, even just energy R&D - $100 million is indeed a drop in the bucket. And it's private investor money, for something that might actually have a huge practical payoff. So why the grousing? It doesn't have to become an energy cure-all to still have a useful result. And if it fails, what is the practical loss?

  • Some of the best theoretical physicists and engineers are working on the ITAR project backed by billions of government grants. Does anyone really think that a measly 100 million, probably half of it going to travel expenses to find more funding, is ever going to lead to anything? This is just a scam based on FOMO and rich assholes are just falling for it. I'd rather they just invested money in ITAR
    • Some of the best theoretical physicists and engineers are working on the ITAR project backed by billions of government grants.

      Do you mean ITER?

      Does anyone really think that a measly 100 million, probably half of it going to travel expenses to find more funding, is ever going to lead to anything?

      Obviously they believe the investment is worth the risk, otherwise they would not have done it.

      I've seen a lot of different ideas on how to get useful power from a fusion reactor. There was a series of such videos on both TED Talks and Google Talks where many of these fusion power projects were explained. I suggest people seek them out and watch some of them. This and the Polywell Fusor sound far more plausible than the ITER money pit.

      This is just a scam based on FOMO and rich assholes are just falling for it.

      At least they are doing more about solving global war

      • "Obviously they believe the investment is worth the risk, otherwise they would not have done it."

        But that assumes the decision-making process is sound. As any number of crypto scams demonstrate, fools and their money remain easily separated due to less-than-sound decision making.

        "Maybe it is a scam, but at least they are trying to solve the problem"

        If it is a scam, then they are, by definition, *not* trying to solve the problem.

        I don't believe it is a scam, but I believe it cannot possibly work for some ver

        • But that assumes the decision-making process is sound.

          Indeed it does.

          If it is a scam, then they are, by definition, *not* trying to solve the problem.

          If General Fusion is running a scam that doesn't mean a person they scammed is not interested in solving the problem, and willing to put up their own money to that end. They have every intent on solving the problem, they are concerned enough to invest their own money, they simply didn't have all the data they needed. General Fusion has been around for a while, and they have shown that they are building stuff, if this is a scam then they are doing a poor job of it by spending so much money.

          Fusion is a very difficult problem. I think we can safely say it will contribute nothing to solving the climate change problem.

          T

  • The original design was done here at the UW and then moved for a variety of reasons.

    Commercial rollouts are 2030 at the earliest.

  • by careysub ( 976506 ) on Tuesday December 17, 2019 @05:46PM (#59529932)

    While it holds out the promise of cheap, carbon-free energy...

    It does not hold the promise for cheap energy, and hasn't since about the end of Project Sherwood in the mid 1950s. Project Sherwood was a highly classified military project to produce fusion power, at a time when it was thought to be easy. They found that it wasn't, shut the program down, and declassified the research since they had discovered that it was going to be very difficult. That was the end of the notion that it might be cheap.

    As research proceeded it got harder and harder which means more and more expensive. Literally hundreds of approaches have been studied now with the Tokamak the only one that currently has a strong case for feasibility, but the cost of that power when they are ready to build power plants will be about 10 times current market cost (which has been stable, adjusted for inflation, for 60+ years now).

    Maybe some clever new tweak of prior approaches or (very unlikely) a totally new approach will cut that cost - but since the fuel breeding and recovery part of fusion power -- which all approaches must deal with -- is more that 10% of the cost, none of them will be cost competitive with existing power sources.

    So "cheap" does not apply.

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