"All of a sudden the current energy goes from being almost too much to almost negligible," said lead author Thomas Jarboe, a UW professor of aeronautics and astronautics. He presents the findings this week at the International Atomic Energy Association's 24th annual Fusion Energy Conference in San Diego.
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/20 ... 151629.htm
Mug Handles for Lower-Cost, Controllable Fusion Energy
Mug Handles for Lower-Cost, Controllable Fusion Energy
"Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, doesn't go away."
--Philip K. Dick
--Philip K. Dick
I'm guessing 1 % of the energy input is in comparison with current Tokamak approaches. If true, it would change the scaling formulas tremendously and make it much more economic. Of course the key points is if it works, and does not introduce a new set of problems , such seems to be the pattern for magnetic confinement fusion.
Dan Tibbets
Dan Tibbets
To error is human... and I'm very human.
Yeah, thats how I understood it too.I'm guessing 1 % of the energy input is in comparison with current Tokamak approaches. If true, it would change the scaling formulas tremendously and make it much more economic. Of course the key points is if it works, and does not introduce a new set of problems , such seems to be the pattern for magnetic confinement fusion
Still this would make toks seem a lot more interesting.
If it doesn't solve the scale problem it will not help much.Skipjack wrote:Yeah, thats how I understood it too.I'm guessing 1 % of the energy input is in comparison with current Tokamak approaches. If true, it would change the scaling formulas tremendously and make it much more economic. Of course the key points is if it works, and does not introduce a new set of problems , such seems to be the pattern for magnetic confinement fusion
Still this would make toks seem a lot more interesting.
And the "inventors" admit you can't get net energy on the scale they tried it at.
And then there is the neutron economy problem for fuel creation. Toks are still a work in progress IMO.
BTW "magnet energy" is only a start up problem. Assuming SC magnets. The question is - can they get higher compression (hotter) with these magnets - making a smaller machine feasible.
Engineering is the art of making what you want from what you can get at a profit.
looks like more info in the machine at http://www.aa.washington.edu/research/HITsi/design.html
My take on your last point is a little bit different. If a Q of 10 is possible in a given machine irregardless of density the input portion of the equation changes size considerably (maybe). If an ITER machine breaks even at an input energy of 500 MW, then scaling to a Q of 10 requires the ITER size. But if input was at 5 MW, the scaling to a Q of 10 would be a much smaller machine and would possibly result in a more economical machine. The machines could be designed for 100 MW output increments, not 5 GW increments. This changes the size cost scaling per useful plant considerably. Of course this ignores the size/complexities like tritium production , heat loading per unit of area, and a bag of other concerns as you point out.MSimon wrote:If it doesn't solve the scale problem it will not help much.Skipjack wrote:Yeah, thats how I understood it too.I'm guessing 1 % of the energy input is in comparison with current Tokamak approaches. If true, it would change the scaling formulas tremendously and make it much more economic. Of course the key points is if it works, and does not introduce a new set of problems , such seems to be the pattern for magnetic confinement fusion
Still this would make toks seem a lot more interesting.
And the "inventors" admit you can't get net energy on the scale they tried it at.
And then there is the neutron economy problem for fuel creation. Toks are still a work in progress IMO.
BTW "magnet energy" is only a start up problem. Assuming SC magnets. The question is - can they get higher compression (hotter) with these magnets - making a smaller machine feasible.
Conversely a much smaller energy input requirement could push the machine into the realm of profitable D-D fusion, provided they can get the temperature hot enough.
Dan Tibbets
To error is human... and I'm very human.