Breakthrough in nuclear fusion could mean
‘near-limitless energy’
Researchers managed to release more energy than they
put in: a positive gain known as ignition
Nicola
Davis Science correspondent
@NicolaKSDavis
Mon 12 Dec
2022 19.15 GMT
Researchers
have reportedly made a breakthrough in the quest to unlock a “near-limitless,
safe, clean” source of energy: they have got more energy out of a nuclear
fusion reaction than they put in.
Nuclear
fusion involves smashing together light elements such as hydrogen to form
heavier elements, releasing a huge burst of energy in the process. The
approach, which gives rise to the heat and light of the sun and other stars,
has been hailed as having huge potential as a sustainable, low-carbon energy
source.
However,
since nuclear fusion research began in the 1950s, researchers have been unable
to a demonstrate a positive energy gain, a condition known as ignition.
Now, it
seems, the Rubicon has been crossed.
According
to a report in the Financial Times, which has yet to be confirmed by the
National Ignition Facility (NIF) at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in
California that is behind the work, researchers have managed to release 2.5 MJ
of energy after using just 2.1 MJ to heat the fuel with lasers.
Dr Robbie
Scott, of the Science and Technology Facilities Council’s (STFC) Central Laser
Facility (CLF) Plasma Physics Group, who contributed to this research,
described the results as a “momentous achievement”.
“Fusion has
the potential to provide a near-limitless, safe, clean, source of carbon-free
baseload energy,” he said. “This seminal result from the National Ignition
Facility is the first laboratory demonstration of fusion ‘energy-gain’ – where
more fusion energy is output than input by the laser beams.The scale of the
breakthrough for laser fusion research cannot be overstated. .
“The
experiment demonstrates unambiguously that the physics of Laser Fusion works,”
he added. “In order to transform NIF’s result into power production a lot of
work remains, but this is a key step along the path.”
Prof Jeremy
Chittenden, professor of plasma physics at Imperial College London, agreed. “If
what has been reported is true and more energy has been released than was used
to produce the plasma, that is a true breakthrough moment which is tremendously
exciting,” he said.
“It proves that the long sought-after goal, the ‘holy
grail’ of fusion, can indeed be achieved.”
But experts
have stressed that while the results would be an important proof of principle,
the technology is a long way from being a mainstay of the energy landscape. To
start with, 0.4MJ is about 0.1kWh – about enough energy to boil a kettle.
“To turn
fusion into a power source we’ll need to boost the energy gain still further,”
said Chittenden. “We’ll also need to find a way to reproduce the same effect
much more frequently and much more cheaply before we can realistically turn
this into a power plant.”
Prof Justin
Wark, professor of physics at the University of Oxford, added that while, in
principle, the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory could produce such a
result about once a day, a fusion power plant would need to do it 10 times a
second.
And there
is another point: the positive energy gain reported ignores the 500MJ of energy
that was put into the lasers themselves.
However,
Chittenden stressed the NIF was designed for a scientific demonstration, not as
a power plant. “The efficiency of converting electrical energy to laser energy
was not a factor in its design,” he said.
“Anyone
working in fusion would be quick to point out that there is still a long way to
go from demonstrating energy gain to getting to wall-plug efficiency where the
energy coming from a fusion reactor exceeds its electrical energy input
required to run the reactor,” he added.
“The
experiments on NIF demonstrate the scientific process of ignition and how this
leads to high fusion energy gain, but to turn this into a power station we need
to develop simpler methods to reach these conditions, which will need to be
more efficient and above all cheaper in order for inertial fusion to be
realised as a fusion power source.”
The latest
results, if true, top the last big breakthrough by the facility which came just
last year when it was announced that the team had hit 70% of the laser energy
put in to the experiment released as nuclear energy.

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