D Tibbets wrote:In several threads ChrisMB has asked why the Polywell (WB6) hasn't shown neutron outputs at substantially lower potential wells than 10,000 volts.
I am not sure I have said that. Please excuse me if I have mislead you with any ambiguities.
What I have aimed to say is that if a given configuration of Polywell, or in fact of any fusion reactor whatsoever, has the capacity to seriously pump out useful amounts of power then it must be able to produce measurable amounts of DD fusion at lower voltages.
So, for example, if you set up an experiment and you
do not get measurable (by which I mean 10^~6 neutrons/s) at either 500eV for thermal or fast-ion-into-fast-ion reactors, or 2kV for beam-target devices, then scaling up the collision energies to max DD peak will
not give you useful power outputs. This point I am making is just about the scaling of fusion reactions with collision energy.
Now on your particular point, it is valid. If you were to only get a 10^~6 reaction rate for a few ms, then, indeed, your statistics of neutron detection would give you some wide uncertainties, for sure. But a similar same calc can be done at whatever collions energy you *do* begin to get measurable fusion reactions. For example, if your reactor is putting out 10^9 neuts/sec for DD at 10kV, then the maximum this reactor can put out, if you up the collision energy alone, is around 10^12 because the peak reactivity for DD is only 3 oom or so above that to be found at 10kV, and 10^12/s maximum neutron output is of no interest for power.
Bottom line corollary is this: If you are in the business, or hobby, of trying to build your own over-unity fusion reactor, then you don't need to design [thus, pay] for anything more than a few kV in prototype form because if you don't get measurable neutrons out of DD at a few kV, then your reactor just ain't gonna do much at higher voltages. (NB: Even if you do get neutrons at a few kV, then this is still not necessarily a proof that it'll work, but without this characteristic, then forget it!)
So, to recap, you can only expect a DD reactor to get to around 3 oom output above whatever you can get at 10kV. This is
also true for DT because, similarly, its peak is 3 oom above that to be found at 10kV. Whereas, the peak output for DD is around 12 oom above that to be found at a few kV, so if you get 10^6 neuts at a few kV then you might extrapolate to 10^18 at peak.
(Just to note; if you run p11B, then
its peak is 11 oom above that at 10kV so if anyone actually gets 10^6 alphas per sec at 10kV then that reactor will go
really steaming if the voltage is cranked up.)