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Power Government United Kingdom

UK Seeks Site For World's First Fusion Power Station (sciencemag.org) 47

sciencehabit writes: The U.K. government today invited communities around the country to volunteer a site for a prototype fusion reactor, which would be the first -- it is hoped -- to put electricity into the grid. The project, called Spherical Tokamak for Energy Production (STEP), began last year with an initial 222 million pounds over 5 years to develop a design. The U.K. Atomic Energy Authority, the government agency overseeing the effort, says construction could begin as soon as 2032, with operations by 2040.

Still, spherical tokamaks also come with drawbacks. The hot dense plasma in a smaller device is more punishing on materials, so components may need to be replaced more often. And STEP is unlikely to be capable of breeding tritium, one of two hydrogen isotopes that fuels the reactor. Tritium is radioactive with a half-life of 12 years and global supplies are low. A working reactor will have to breed its own tritium by surrounding the vessel with patches of lithium that produce tritium when bombarded by neutrons from the fusion reaction.

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UK Seeks Site For World's First Fusion Power Station

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  • Seems like a good default to go to.
  • ITER (Score:5, Insightful)

    by backslashdot ( 95548 ) on Wednesday December 02, 2020 @10:18PM (#60788202)

    Shouldn't they wait for results from the ITER experiment (expected around 2026)?
     

    • Re:ITER (Score:5, Informative)

      by Richard_at_work ( 517087 ) on Wednesday December 02, 2020 @10:59PM (#60788328)

      Different type of tokamak reactor - ITER is a toroidal tokamak, while STEP is a spherical one. Other than pure science, theres probably little that ITER can offer to STEP in terms of technical design support.

      Plus ITER isn't due to actually start its intended fusion experiments until 2035.

      • Yes ITER is a toroidal tokamak, however by 2026 we should have enough results to show that plasma physics modeling isn't terribly off-base. We don't need to wait for D-T fusion operations for that.

        • And given STEP wont start construction until 2032, Im sure that 2026 will be early enough to either adjust the design based on ITERs plasma results or it will still be early enough to cancel it altogether.

    • by hey! ( 33014 )

      Then in the best case you have to wait to spend the money. In the worst case ITER is a flop and you never get to spend the money.

      It's more prudent to spend the money now, while your party is in power and has some say about where it goes.

    • by MrL0G1C ( 867445 )

      Our gov't have lost it, they are on a spending spree wasting money on projects without a good return when the money could be far better spent. It's like our debt is now so big that even big projects look cheap in comparison to the national debt.

      A lot of self-employed people in the UK must be laughing all the way to the bank as they are allowed to continue working whilst claiming a grant that gives them 80% of earnings because of some reduction in earnings due to COVID.

    • Absolutely not! We must spend the budget before some other department gets it. After-all, we can just raise taxes on people who aren't working and small businesses that are almost ready for the plague cart. "Bring out your dead!"
  • Is this a power plant if they have no plans to produce power? From the article this is a prototype, a fusion reactor that could produce a net energy output but there's no plan to harness this for power to the grid.

    Fusion is still a long way away. From what's in the article it's 20 years away at best.

    I'm sure these experiments have value but it's not going to solve anyone's energy problems in the near term. They will need more nuclear fission power plants for that.

  • Fusion generates fast neutrons at 14MeV +

    1. It will go through everything

    2. It will f*ck up any material and make it a long term radioactive waste disposal problem

    It is not anything like the clean energy it is purported to be. Its radioactive waste disposal problems make a nuclear plant pale by comparison.

    • A strong magnetic field contains even the fastest charged particles. .Yes, tokamak is a fundametally flawed design anyway.

      • A strong magnetic field contains even the fastest charged particles. .Yes, tokamak is a fundametally flawed design anyway.

        A neutron has no charge, a magnetic field will not affect it. One way to get energy from fast neutrons is a fast breeder reactor, a fission device. Another way to get energy from fast neutrons is to slow them down with a moderator and use the resulting slow neutrons to produce fission. Fast neutrons from a magnetic containment fusion device is often wasted energy. There's experiments to use these fast neutrons to bombard some elements to produce helium and hydrogen nuclei, those nuclei can be contained

  • by hackertourist ( 2202674 ) on Thursday December 03, 2020 @03:55AM (#60788854)

    The UK has a long history with fusion power. The ZETA [wikipedia.org] fusion reactor at Harwell went operational in 1957. This was one of the first large-scale fusion experiments. It didn't achieve fusion, but it did provide critical information.

  • Put it wherever the fuck you want since you don't have it anyway.
  • Oh wait, we've alreaey got one! Stop being morons and use that!

  • One Web
    Super fast Vaccine approval
    "First" Fusion power
    etc. etc.

    It is almost as if the incompetent UK government, having inflicted the Brexit Coup on the UK, is now desperate to fool the moronic minority who voted for it that there is an upside ( because the economic downside is going to be PAINFUL ) and are willing to waste billions on madcap - and sometimes dangerous - schemes.

The truth of a proposition has nothing to do with its credibility. And vice versa.

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