Fusion
Fusion reactions are inhibited by the electrical repulsive force that
acts
between two positively charged nuclei. For fusion to occur, the two
nuclei must
approach each other at high speed to overcome the electrical
repulsion and
attain a sufficiently small separation (less than
one-trillionth of a
centimeter) that the short-range strong nuclear force
dominates. For the
production of useful amounts of energy, a large number of
nuclei must under go
fusion: that is to say, a gas of fusing nuclei must be
produced. In a gas at
extremely high temperature, the average nucleus
contains sufficient kinetic
energy to undergo fusion. Such a medium can be
produced by heating an ordinary
gas of neutral atoms beyond the temperature
at which electrons are knocked out
of the atoms. The result is an ionized gas
consisting of free negative electrons
and positive nuclei. This gas
constitutes a plasma. Plasma, in physics, is an
electrically conducting
medium in which there are roughly equal numbers of
positively and negatively
charged particles, produced when the atoms in a gas
become ionized. It is
sometimes referred to as the fourth state of matter,
distinct from the solid,
liquid, and gaseous states. When energy is continuously
applied to a solid,
it first melts, then it vaporizes, and finally electrons are
removed from
some of the neutral gas atoms and molecules to yield a mixture of
positively
charged ions and negatively charged electrons, while overall neutral
charge
density is maintained. When a significant portion of the gas has
been
ionized, its properties will be altered so substantially that little
resemblance
to solids, liquids, and gases remains. A plasma is unique in the
way in which it
interacts with itself with electric and magnetic fields, and
with its
environment. A plasma can be thought of as a collection of ions,
electrons,
neutral atoms and molecules, an photons in which some atoms are
being ionized
simultaneously with other electrons recombining with ions to
form neutral
particles, while photons are continuously being produced and
absorbed.
Scientists have estimated that more than 99 percent of the
matter in the
universe exists in the plasma state. All of the observed stars,
including the
Sun, consist of plasma, as do interstellar and
interplanetary media and the
outer atmospheres of the planets. Although most
terrestrial matter exists in a
solid, liquid or gaseous state, plasma is
found in lightning bolts and auroras,
in gaseous discharge lamps (neon
lights), and in the crystal structure of
metallic solids. Plasmas are
currently being studied as an affordable source of
clean electric power from
thermonuclear fusion reactions. The scientific problem
for fusion is thus the
problem of producing and confining a hot, dense plasma.
The core of a
fusion reactor would consist of burning plasma. Fusion would occur
between
the nuclei, with electrons present only to maintain macroscopic
charge
neutrality. Stars, including the Sun, consist of plasma that generates
energy by
fusion reactions. In these "natural fusion reactors" the reacting,
or
burning, plasma is confirmed by its own gravity. It is not possible to
assemble
on Earth a plasma sufficiently massive to be gravitationally
confined. The
hydrogen bomb is an example of fusion reactions produced in an
uncontrolled,
unconfined manner in which the energy density is so high that
the energy release
is explosive. By contrast, the use of fusion for peaceful
energy generating
requires control and confinement of a plasma at high
temperature and is often
called controlled thermonuclear fusion. In the
development of fusion power
technology, demonstration of " energy breakeven"
is taken to signify the
scientific feasibility of fusion. At breakeven, the
fusion power produced by a
plasma is equal to the power input to maintain the
plasma. This requires a
plasma that is hot, dense, and well confined. The
temperature required, about
100 million Kelvins, is several times that of
the Sun. The product of the
density and energy confinement time of the plasma
(the time it takes the plasma
to lose its energy if not replaced) must exceed
a critical value. There are two
main approaches to controlled fusion –
namely, magnetic confinement and
inertial confinement. Magnetic confinement
of plasmas is the most highly
developed approach to controlled fusion. The
hot plasma is contained by magnetic
forces exerted on the charged particles.
A large part of the problem of fusion
has been the attainment of magnetic
field configurations that effectively
confine the plasma. A successful
configuration must meet three criteria: (1) the
plasma must be in a
time-independent equilibrium state, (2) the equilibrium must
be
macroscopically stable, and (3) the leakage of plasma energy to the
bounding
wall must be small. A single charged particle tends to spiral about
a magnetic
line of force. It is necessary that the single particle
trajectories do not
intersect the wall. Moreover, the pressure force, arising
from the thermal
energy of all the particles, is in a direction to expand the
plasma. For the
plasma to be in equilibrium, the magnetic force acting on the
electric current
within the plasma must balance the pressure force at every
point in the plasma.
The equilibrium thus obtained has to be stable. A
plasma is stable if after a
small perturbation it returns to its original
state. A plasma is continually
perturbed by random thermal "noise"
fluctuations. If unstable, it
might depart from its equilibrium state and
rapidly escape the confines of the
magnetic field (perhaps in less than
one-thousandth of a second). A plasma in
stable equilibrium can be maintained
indefinitely if the leakage of energy from
the plasma is balanced by energy
input. If the plasma energy loss is too large,
then ignition cannot be
achieved. An unavoidable diffusion of energy across the
magnetic field lines
will occur from the collisions between the particles. The
net effect is to
transport energy from the hot core to the wall. This transport
process, known
as classical diffusion, is theoretically not strong in hot fusion
plasmas and
is easily compensated for by heat from the alpha particle fusion
products. In
experiments, however, energy is lost from plasma more rapidly than
would be
expected from classical diffusion. The observed energy loss typically
exceeds
the classical value by a factor of 10-100. Reduction of this
anomalous
transport is important to the engineering feasibility of fusion.
An
understanding of anomalous transport in plasmas in terms of physics is not
yet
in hand. A viewpoint under investigation is that the anomalous loss is
caused by
fine-scale turbulence in the plasma. However, turbulently
fluctuating electric
and magnetic fields can push particles across the
confining magnetic field.
Solution of the anomalous transport problem
involves research into fundamental
topics in plasma physics, such as plasma
turbulence. Many different types of
magnetic configurations for plasma
confinement have been devised and tested over
the years. This has resulted in
a family of related magnetic configurations,
which may be grouped into two
classes: closed, toroidal configurations and open,
linear configurations.
Toroidal devices are the most highly developed. In a
simple straight magnetic
field the plasma would be free to stream out the ends.
End loss can be
eliminated by forming the plasma and field in the closed shape
of a doughnut,
or torus, or, in an approach called mirror confinement, by
"plugging" the
ends of such a device magnetically and
electrostatically. In the inertial
confinement a fuel mass is compressed rapidly
to densities 1,000 to10,000
times greater than normal by generating a pressure
as high as 1017 pascals
for periods as short as nanoseconds. Near the end of
this time period the
implosion speed exceeds about 300,000 meters per second. At
maximum
compression of the fuel, which is now in a cool plasma state, the energy
in
converging shock waves is sufficient to heat the vary center of the fuel
to
temperatures high enough to induce fusion reactions. If the product of
mass and
size of this highly compressed fuel material is large enough, energy
will be
generated through fusion reactions before the plasma disassembles.
Under proper
conditions, more energy can be released than is required to
compresses, and
shock-heat the fuel to thermonuclear burning conditions. The
physical processes
in ICF bear relationship to those in thermonuclear weapons
and in star
formation—namely, gravitational collapse, compression heating,
and the onset
of nuclear fusion. The situation in star formation differs in
one respect: after
gravitational collapse ceases and star begins to expand
again due to heat from
exoergic nuclear fusion reactions, the expansion is
arrested by the gravity
force associated with the enormous mass of the star.
In a star a state of
equilibrium in both size and temperature is achieved. In
ICF, by contrast,
complete disassembly of fuel occurs. The fusion reaction
least difficult to
achieve combines a deuteron (the nucleus of the deuterium
atom) with a triton
(the nucleus of a tritium atom). Both nuclei are isotopes
of the hydrogen
nucleus and contain a single unit of positive electric
charge. Deuterium-tritium
(D-T) fusion requires the nuclei to have lower
kinetic energy than is needed for
the fusion of more highly charged heavier
nuclei. The two products of the
reaction are an alpha particle (nucleus of
the helium atom) at an energy of 3.5
million electron volts (MeV) and a
neuron at an energy of 14.1 MeV. (One MeV is
the energy equivalent of 10
billion Kelvin.). The neutrons, lacking electric
charge, is not affected by
electric or magnetic fields within the plasma and can
escape the plasma to
deposit its energy in a material, such as lithium, which
can surround the
plasma. The electrically charge alpha particle collides with
the deuterons
and tritons (by their electrical interaction) and can be
magnetically
confined within the plasma. It there by transfers its energy to the
reacting
nuclei. When this redeposition of the fusion energy into the plasma
exceeds
the power lost from the plasma (by electromagnetic radiation,
conduction, and
convection), the plasma will be self-sustaining, or"ignited." With deuterium and
tritium as the fuel, the fusion reactor would
be an effectively inexhaustible
source of energy. Deuterium is obtained from
seawater. About one in every
3,000 water molecules contains a deuterium atom.
There is enough
deuterium in the oceans to provide for the world’s energy
needs for billions
of years. One gram of fusion fuel can produce as much energy
as 9,000 liters
of oil. The amount of deuterium found naturally in one liter of
water is the
energy equivalent of 300 liters of gasoline. Tritium is bred in the
fusion
reactor. It is generated in the lithium blanket as a product of the
reactor
in which neutrons are captured by the lithium nuclei. A fusion reactor
would
have several attractive safety features. First, it is not subject to
a
runaway, or "meltdown," accident as is a fission reactor. The
fusion
reaction is not a chain reaction; it requires a hot plasma.
Accidental
interruption of a plasma control system would extinguish the
plasma and
terminate fusion. Second, the products of a fusion reaction are
not radioactive;
hence, no long-term radioactive wastes would be generated.
Neutron bombardment
would activate the walls of the containment vessel, but
such activated material
is shorter-lived and less toxic than the waste
products of a fission reactor.
Moreover, even this activation problem may
be eliminated, either by the
development of advanced, low-activation
materials, such as vanadium-based
materials, or by the employment of
"advanced" fusion-fuel cycles that
do not produce neutrons, such as the
fusion of deuterons with helium-3 nuclei.
Nearly neutron-free fusion
systems, which require higher temperatures than D-T
fusion, might make up a
"second generation" of fusion reactors).
Finally, a fusion reactor would
not release the gaseous pollutants that
accompany the combustion of fossil
fuels; hence, fusion would not produce a
greenhouse effect. The fusion
process has been studied as part of nuclear
physics for much of the 20th
century. In the late 1930s the German-born
physicist Hans A. Bethe first
recognized that the fusion of hydrogen nuclei to
form deuterium is exoergic
(there is release of energy) and, together with
subsequent reactions,
accounts for the energy source in stars. Work proceeded
over the next two
decades, motivated by the need to understand nuclear matter
and forces, to
learn more about the nuclear physics of stellar objects, and to
develop
thermonuclear weapons (the hydrogen bomb) and predict their
performance.
During the late 1940s and early 1950s, research programs in
the United States,
United Kingdom, and Soviet Union began to yield a
better understanding of
nuclear fusion, and investigators embarked on ways of
exploiting the process for
practical energy production. This work focused on
the use of magnetic fields and
electromagnetic forces to contain extremely
hot gases called plasmas. A plasma
consists of unbound electrons and positive
ions whose motion is dominated by
electromagnetic interactions. It is the
only state of matter in which
thermonuclear reactions can occur in a
self-sustaining manner. Astrophysics and
magnetic fusion research, among
other fields, require extensive knowledge of how
gases behave in the plasma
state. The inadequacy of the then-existent knowledge
became clearly apparent
in the 1950s as the behavior of plasma in many of the
early magnetic
confinement systems proved too complex to understand. Moreover,
researchers
found that confining fusion plasma in a "magnetic trap"
was far more
challenging than they had anticipated. Plasma must be heated to
tens of
millions of degrees Kelvin or higher to induce and sustain the
thermonuclear
reaction required to produce usable amounts of energy. At
temperatures this
high, the nuclei in the plasma move rapidly enough to overcome
their mutual
repulsion and fuse. It is exceedingly difficult to contain plasmas
at such a
temperature level because the hot gases tend to expand and escape from
the
enclosing structure. The work of the major American, British, and
Soviet
fusion programs was strictly classified until 1958. That year,
research
objectives were made public, and many of the topics being studied
were found to
be similar, as were the problems encountered. Since that time,
investigators
have continued to study and measure fusion reactions between
the lighter
elements and have arrived at more accurate determinations of
reaction rates.
Also, the formulas developed by nuclear physicists for
predicting the rate of
fusion-energy generation have been adopted by
astrophysicists to derive new
information about the structure of the stellar
interior and about the evolution
of stars. The late 1960s witnessed a major
advance in efforts to harness fusion
reactions for practical energy
production: the Soviets announced the achievement
of high plasma temperature
(about 3,000,000 K), along with other physical
parameters, in a tokamak, a
toroidal magnetic confinement system in which the
plasma is kept generally
stable both by an externally generated, doughnut-shaped
magnetic field and by
electric currents flowing within the plasma itself. (The
basic concept of the
tokamak had been first proposed by Andrey D. Sakharov and
Igor Y. Tamm
around 1950.) Since its development, the tokamak has been the focus
of most
research, though other approaches have been pursued as well. Employing
the
tokamak concept, physicists have attained conditions in plasmas that
approach
those required for practical fusion-power generation. Work on another
major
approach to fusion energy, called inertial confinement fusion (ICF), has
been
carried on since the early 1960s. Initial efforts were undertaken in
1961
with a then-classified proposal that large pulses of laser energy could
be used
to implode and shock-heat matter to temperatures at which nuclear
fusion would
be vigorous. Aspects of inertial confinement fusion were
declassified in the
1970s, but a key element of the work--specifically
the design of targets
containing pellets of fusion fuels--still is largely
secret. Very painstaking
work to design and develop suitable targets
continues today. At the same time,
significant progress has been made in
developing high-energy, short-pulse
drivers with which to implode
millimeter-radius targets. The drivers include
both high-power lasers and
particle accelerators capable of producing beams of
high-energy electrons or
ions. Lasers that produce more than 100,000 joules in
pulses on the order of
one nanosecond (10-9 second) have been developed, and the
power available in
short bursts exceeds 1014 watts. Best estimates are that
practical inertial
confinement for fusion energy will require either laser or
particle-beam
drivers with an energy of 5,000,000 to 10,000,000 joules capable
of
delivering more than 1014 watts of power to a small target of deuterium
and
tritium.