Major Fusion Energy Breakthrough to Be Announced
by Scientists
Researchers working with lasers at Lawrence Livermore
National Laboratory are expected to say they made a major advance that could
lead to future energy sources.
Kenneth
Chang
By Kenneth
Chang
Dec. 12,
2022
Updated
1:24 p.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/12/12/science/nuclear-fusion-energy-breakthrough.html
Scientists
at a federal nuclear weapons facility have made a potentially significant
advance in fusion research that could lead to a source of bountiful energy in
the future, according to a government official.
The advance
is expected to be announced Tuesday by the Department of Energy, which said a
“major scientific breakthrough” was made at Lawrence Livermore National
Laboratory in California. Jennifer Granholm, the energy secretary, and White
House and other Energy Department officials are expected to be in attendance.
The Financial Times reported on Sunday that the scientific advance involves the
National Ignition Facility, or NIF, which uses giant lasers to create
conditions that briefly mimic the explosions of nuclear weapons.
The
government official, who spoke anonymously to discuss results that are not yet
public, said that the fusion experiment at NIF achieved what is known as
ignition, where the fusion energy generated equals the laser energy that started
the reaction. Ignition is also called energy gain of one.
Such a
development would improve the ability of the United States to maintain its
nuclear weapons without nuclear testing and could set the stage for future
progress that could one day lead to the use of laser fusion as an energy
source.
Although
not yet publicly announced, the news has quickly bounced among physicists and
other scientists who study fusion.
“Yesterday
a scientist friend sent me a note stating that Livermore had exceeded energy
gain of one just last week and would be announcing the result on Tuesday,”
Stephen Bodner, a retired plasma physicist who has long been a critic of NIF,
said in an email Monday morning. “They deserve commendations for reaching their
goal.”
What is
fusion?
Fusion is
the thermonuclear reaction that powers the sun and other stars — the fusing of
hydrogen atoms into helium. The mass of helium is slightly less than the
original hydrogen atoms. Thus, by Einstein’s iconic E=mc² equation, that
difference in mass is converted into a burst of energy.
Fusion that
could be produced in a controlled fashion on Earth could mean an energy source
that does not produce greenhouse gases like coal and oil, or dangerous,
long-lived radioactive waste, as current nuclear power plants do.
How do you
produce fusion without a star?
Most fusion
efforts to date have employed doughnut-shaped reactors known as tokamaks.
Within the reactors, hydrogen gas is heated to temperatures hot enough that the
electrons are stripped away from the hydrogen nuclei, creating what is known as
a plasma — clouds of positively charged nuclei and negatively charged
electrons. Magnetic fields trap the plasma within the doughnut shape, and the
nuclei fuse together, releasing energy in the form of neutrons flying outward.
Tuesday’s
announcement, however, involves a different approach. NIF consists of 192
gigantic lasers, which fire simultaneously at a metal cylinder about the size
of a pencil eraser. The cylinder, heated to some 5.4 million degrees
Fahrenheit, vaporizes, generating an implosion of X-rays, which in turn heats
and compresses a BB-size pellet of frozen deuterium and tritium, two heavier
forms of hydrogen. The implosion fuses the hydrogen into helium, creating
fusion.
The
BB-sized cryogenic target used to reach the burning plasma state in an
experiment in November 2020 and February 2021 at the National Ignition
Facility.Credit...Jason Laurea/Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
What laser
fusion advances have been made so far?
The main
purpose of NIF, built at a cost of $3.5 billion, is to conduct experiments that
help the United States maintain its nuclear weapons without nuclear test
explosions. Proponents also said it could advance fusion research that could
lead to viable commercial power plants.
However,
NIF initially generated hardly any fusion at all. In 2014, Livermore scientists
finally reported success, but the energy produced then was minuscule — the
equivalent of what a 60-watt light bulb consumes in five minutes.
Last year,
Livermore scientists reported a major leap, a burst of energy — 10 quadrillion
watts of power — that was 70 percent as much as the energy of laser light
hitting the hydrogen target.
But the
burst — essentially a miniature hydrogen bomb — lasted only 100 trillionths of
a second.
The report
by the Financial Times on Sunday suggests Livermore will announce that in the
latest experiment the fusion energy produced exceeded the amount of laser
energy hitting the hydrogen target.
For that to
occur, the fusion reaction had to be self-sustaining, meaning the torrent of
particles flowing outward from the hot spot at the center of the pellet heated
surrounding hydrogen atoms and caused them to fuse as well.
What are
the obstacles to fusion power?
An
important caveat is that the claim focuses on the laser energy hitting the
hydrogen target. NIF’s lasers are extremely inefficient, meaning only a small
fraction of the energy used to power the lasers actually makes it into the
beams themselves.
More modern
technology like solid-state lasers would be more efficient but still far from
100 percent fusion; for this to be practical, the fusion energy output must be
at least several times greater than that of the incoming lasers.
Does
Tuesday’s announcement mean we’ll have cheap fusion energy soon?
No.
Even if
scientists figure out how to generate bigger bursts of fusion, immense
engineering hurdles would remain.
NIF’s
experiments have studied one burst at a time.
A practical
fusion power plant using this concept would require a machine-gun pace of laser
bursts with new hydrogen targets sliding into place for each burst. Then the
torrents of neutrons flying outward from the fusion reactions would have to be
converted into electricity.
The laser
complex fills a building with a footprint equal to three football fields — too
big, too expensive, too inefficient for a commercial power plant.
A
manufacturing process to mass-produce the precise hydrogen targets would have
to be developed.
Kenneth
Chang has been at The Times since 2000, writing about physics, geology,
chemistry, and the planets. Before becoming a science writer, he was a graduate
student whose research involved the control of chaos. @kchangnyt


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