MSimon wrote:
That says that the fusion reaction must have a power gain of 15 to 60.
I think that is a bit of a misleading answer. Generally, that sounds reasonable from a commercial perspective, given all the other associated costs and radioactive materials handling issues, and I wouldn't've thought anyone would pay too much attention to anything less whilst cheap fossil fuels abound.
But the original answer raises a perfectly valid point - how little energy 'gain' do you want to have to put up with to get a 'change' in your energy source. If you put 100MW in and get 303MW out and after converting that 301MW you get 101MW power again 100 of which goes back into the machine, then you've got a net of 1MW.
whoppee.
That's all.
Work out how efficiently you can convert the output energy back into 'high quality' electrical energy to feed back in. You only need to be greater than that to get an energy over-unity gain. And that pitance of energy output may be enough to justify running it. Better than nothing. You'd be glad for 1MW net power if you were stuck on a moon base or something!
Just generating heat is no great function for such a power source, it has to [be able to] generate electricity. You can get a Q=2.5 energy gain just by running a reverse cycle air conditioner to generate heat, 1kJ in, 2.5kJ heat out (energy that is sucked in from the colder outside).
You can also power air conditioning cycles with heat directly - like the old gas powered fridges. Someone should get around to designing and commercialising a domestic boiler that also drives an external heat extraction engine to get more heating energy out of that gas.