Sputtering From Alpha Impacts
Sputtering From Alpha Impacts
Alpha impacts on the grid(s) is going to be a problem. If alpha impacts knock metallic elements from the grid(s) they could poison the reactions or at the very least waste electrons and energy.
One solution - coat the grids with a sufficiently thick layer of Boron and run the machine such that the Boron in the reactor replenishes the Boron on the grid(s).
Thus - any elements knocked off the grids are a reaction species and thus do no harm to the reaction.
One solution - coat the grids with a sufficiently thick layer of Boron and run the machine such that the Boron in the reactor replenishes the Boron on the grid(s).
Thus - any elements knocked off the grids are a reaction species and thus do no harm to the reaction.
The alternative is to create a material that can absorb the alphas well.
The trick is to make it vacuum compatible too. Soft materials tend to out gas too much. But they absorb nuclear impacts really well. I'd bet some kind of plastic with long chains and lots of boron in it will work pretty well.
You have to combine it with something. Natural boron is not very strong.
The trick is to make it vacuum compatible too. Soft materials tend to out gas too much. But they absorb nuclear impacts really well. I'd bet some kind of plastic with long chains and lots of boron in it will work pretty well.
You have to combine it with something. Natural boron is not very strong.
I was not aware of Boron's structural weakness.drmike wrote:The alternative is to create a material that can absorb the alphas well.
The trick is to make it vacuum compatible too. Soft materials tend to out gas too much. But they absorb nuclear impacts really well. I'd bet some kind of plastic with long chains and lots of boron in it will work pretty well.
You have to combine it with something. Natural boron is not very strong.
However, I believe ITER (some other fusion experiment?) uses a boron coating (evaporated on the surfaces?) to solve the sputtering problem.
If you use pure Boron you have one segment of the problem solved (reaction species) the other problem is to maintain a balance between the coating and the reactants.
Once you get into hydrocarbons you have problems with non-reactant species.
The question then is do thin films have significantly different properties from bulk Boron.
This might be a place to start:
really long url
Search Boron on this page:
http://www.psfc.mit.edu/research/alcato ... needs.html
also a look here:
http://www.osti.gov/energycitations/pro ... id=5785157
and here:
http://www.iop.org/EJ/abstract/0029-5515/45/7/018
I'm pretty confident that the thermal problems can be solved. So this is the next hump IMO.
Last edited by MSimon on Sun Dec 30, 2007 5:17 am, edited 1 time in total.
Thanks! I think it's just time and money - there will be an effective solution to the "first wall" problem in a Bussard reactor just like there is one in tokamaks. I like the sputtered Boron idea, especially if you can create the crystaline form. You'd have a nice carrier substrate and a good surface which would be a conductor as well.
It's "just" engineering.
It's "just" engineering.

If you look at the photos of the interior of the vacuum chamber used with WB6, when we received it, the interior was mirror-bright electropolished (per my specification). 'Twas a true thing of beauty. WB4 was probably the device that turned it all purple and blotchy.
Sputter coating is going to happen naturally ... might as well take advantage of it.
I'm more concerned about this problem than almost anything else discussed. Alpha impact is very likely to create the power limit for these machines.
Sputter coating is going to happen naturally ... might as well take advantage of it.
I'm more concerned about this problem than almost anything else discussed. Alpha impact is very likely to create the power limit for these machines.
Then we have to assume that alpha impact on the coils is one part of the power generation, and take advantage of it. It's two problems: absorbing the impact and converting that to heat, and sucking the heat away. The latter is easy, balancing the sputtering with the impact poisons will be harder.
But I still think it is doable.
But I still think it is doable.
If we can keep the direct heat loss down to 20% of output I'd just throw it away. Using it in any kind of thermal engine is way too expensive.
There are silicon thermoelectric devices coming. We should wait for them. Moving parts are a killer.
I do agree that the first wall problem is difficult but solvable.
Compared to that thermal problems are relatively trivial. One thing we can do is make the reaction density smaller so that the "blue sky" covered by the coils is reduced. If we operate at the pB11 resonance region that may be inherent.
There are silicon thermoelectric devices coming. We should wait for them. Moving parts are a killer.
I do agree that the first wall problem is difficult but solvable.
Compared to that thermal problems are relatively trivial. One thing we can do is make the reaction density smaller so that the "blue sky" covered by the coils is reduced. If we operate at the pB11 resonance region that may be inherent.
Engineering is the art of making what you want from what you can get at a profit.
Silicon Thermoelectric Power Conversion
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http://spectrum.ieee.org/jan08/5879
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http://spectrum.ieee.org/jan08/5879
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It is looking more and more like Boron is a magic material.Finally, they doped the silicon with boron to introduce defects at an atomic level.
Engineering is the art of making what you want from what you can get at a profit.
Re: Silicon Thermoelectric Power Conversion
IIRC boron has been used as a semiconductor doping material for years now.MSimon wrote:It is looking more and more like Boron is a magic material.
Japanese researchers recently found boron-doped silicon carbide superconducts at 1.4K.
Tony,
As far as we know at this time the paths are isotropic. i.e equal in all directions in the center of mass frame.
This is true for neutron emission from fission and also neutron reemission from any kind of neutron absorbing process that doesn't capture the neutron.
As far as we know at this time the paths are isotropic. i.e equal in all directions in the center of mass frame.
This is true for neutron emission from fission and also neutron reemission from any kind of neutron absorbing process that doesn't capture the neutron.
Engineering is the art of making what you want from what you can get at a profit.
Thank you Simon for the quick reply. I was reading elsewhere about a spinning black hole (surely something totally unlike a polywell) and thought that if you could spin things very fast, you might get preferential emission from something like the polar jets and the equatorial edge. Of course it is most probably impractical to arrange in the polywell, and probably detracts from stability of the well. The heavy stuff (B11 etc) will all want to escape anyway ... but there you go.
Sorry for the noise
Regards,
Tony Barry
Sorry for the noise
Regards,
Tony Barry
Re: Silicon Thermoelectric Power Conversion
Quintessential, even? The legendary Fifth Element...MSimon wrote: It is looking more and more like Boron is a magic material.
Supposedly the MBDA Meteor's ramrocket uses boron-loaded solid propellant to triple the specific impulse...
...yeah, yeah. Noise, not signal...
Re: Silicon Thermoelectric Power Conversion
And not depleted uranium? Huh.93143 wrote:Quintessential, even? The legendary Fifth Element...
Supposedly the MBDA Meteor's ramrocket uses boron-loaded solid propellant to triple the specific impulse...
...yeah, yeah. Noise, not signal...
Well, it's interesting how the periodic table has worked out. (Maybe for a quantum physicist this isn't as surprising, but for me it's a moment of epiphany...)
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+------+ +------+
|H | |He |
|Energy| |Cool- |
| | |ant |
+------+------+------+-------+------+------+ +------+
|Li |Be |B |C |N |O |
|Batt- |Hi-V |Energy|Organic|Cool- |H2O |
|ery |Uses? | |Life |ant | |
+------+------+------+-------+------+------+
