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Dr Ian Falconer School of Physics, University of Sydney Some of the slides shown in this presentation were provided by: Dr Joe Khachan, University of Sydney Professor John O’Connor, University of Newcastle I gratefully acknowledge their permission to use these slides
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Fusion: our energy future ?
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FUSION The energy that drives the stars Can it also be harnessed on earth to provide the energy our society needs?
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The world has real energy problems (And fusion energy MUST be a big part of the solution) What is fusion? How do we harness fusion energy? Why fusion? And what IS fusion?
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The world is running out of (cheap) energy - i.e. fossil fuels and CO 2 from fossil fuels is a greenhouse gas For these reasons, we URGENTLY need a energy source to replace fossil fuels (and it must be “portable” - like petrol – so it can be used in cars and trucks)
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The world has real energy problems We are fast running out of oil (and natural gas) Burning of fossil fuels generates carbon dioxide (CO 2 ) For every tonne of oil or coal used for generating energy, around THREE tonnes of CO 2 are generated Per capita energy consumption increases as nations become wealthier Think about India and China
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The case for fusion energy : standard of living Growth of Australia’s Primary energy consumption and GDP
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The case for fusion energy : standard of living
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How long will it last? Oil ~50-100 years Natural gas ~60-100 years Nuclear fission energy (U 235 burners) 50 to ~100 years Nuclear fission energy (breeder reactors) Thousands of years Solar, wind, tidal energy Renewable Fusion energy Millenia
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We have only limited oil and natural gas resources Not only do these fuels generate CO 2, but are a valuable feedstock for the chemical industry The combustion of coal must necessarily generate the greenhouse gas CO 2 Nuclear energy is another limited resource, and waste disposal and proliferation are problematic – at least politically The “renewables” are intermittent resources, which require extensive – and expensive - energy storage capacity if the are to provide energy “on tap” Fusion energy MUST be part of the solution
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What is fusion?
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Fusion energy powers the Sun
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Chemically these isotopes are the same, but the deuterium and tritium store considerable energy in their nuclei – this is the energy that holds the nuclei together The release of the energy stored in the nuclei of “heavy hydrogen” atoms - deuterium and tritium Hydrogen: nucleus consists of 1 proton Deuterium: nucleus consists of 1 proton and 1 neutron Tritium: nucleus consists of 1 proton and 2 neutrons What is fusion?
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The Most Promising Fusion Reaction
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D-D Fusion Reaction Proton Neutron
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Where do the fuels come from? Deuterium is present in all “natural” hydrogen. There is 1 atom of deuterium for every 6,000 atoms of hydrogen. Water is thus an abundant source of deuterium Tritium also occurs naturally, but in a fusion reactor will be created by bombarding a blanket of lithium surrounding the core of the reactor Lithium is also abundant in nature: Australia has 60% of the world’s proven lithium reserves
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“Breeding” tritium Lithium + neutron → Tritium + Helium + ENERGY Liquid lithium will be used as a coolant in fusion reactors. It will absorb the energy of the neutrons, and at the same time “breed” tritium and produce more energy
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How do we harness fusion energy?
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Bang a deuterium nucleus and a tritium nucleus HARD together so they “fuse” A mixture of deuterium and tritium gases must be heated to a very high temperature if the nuclei are to “fuse” – about 100 million degrees! Under these conditions all the atoms are ionized and form a PLASMA These high temperatures can only be achieved if the gases are contained in a “bottle” constructed from a really strong magnetic field And a high density of colliding nuclei is required if we are to get more fusion energy from the reactor than we put into it
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Magnetic Confinement
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Toroidal field produces greater confinement
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Tokamak confinement
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Inside a TOKAMAK
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Tokamak Operating
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Q = P out /P in ~1 “Breakeven” regime : Eg. Joint European Tokamak : 1983 - “Ignition” regime, fully self-sustained : Power Plant. “Burning” regime : plasma dominantly self-heated by fusion born alpha’s 1997 : Q=0.7, 16.1MW fusion Progress in magnetically confined fusion ITER
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ITER – “the way” International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor An international project to produce a prototype fusion reactor ITER partners European Union Japan China Russian Federation USA Korea India (and possibly Brazil – and Canada, Mexico and Kazakhstan)
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The ITER project Fusion power = 500MW Power Gain > 10 Temperature ~ 80 million C Construction cost $10 billion, 10 year operation $6 billion Fiscally, world’s largest science experiment Cadarache, France Consortium of 7 nations
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ITER Person ITER – the next generation tokamak Design completed – construction has just commenced
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Aims of the ITER project Produce and study inductively-driven, burning plasma at Q =P out/ P in 10 (400-500 MW) for an “extended” time, ~ 400 s Produce and study burning plasma with non-inductive drive Q 5 Integrate essential fusion reactor technologies: superconducting magnets, high heat flux components, remote handling Test reactor components: eg tritium breeding module concepts (neutron power load > 0.5 MW m -2, fluence > 0.3 MW year m -2 ).
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Fusion is part of our Energy Future But….. When? 2016 First plasma 2020 First DT “burn” 2021 Q = 10 2024 Construction of DEMO to commence 2033 Operation of DEMO to commence 2045 Construction of power plant to commence 2055? Power plants operates!!!
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NOWASSEMBLY STARTSFIRST PLASMA
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Source: Accelerated development of fusion power. I. Cook et al. 2005 200520502020 ITER today’s experiments materials testing facility (IFMIF) demonstration power-plant (DEMO) commercial power-plants R &D on alternative concepts and advanced materials 2010201520252030203520402045 Beyond ITER…
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Comparison to CPU transistors
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The pros and cons of fusion energy PRO “Unlimited” fuel supply Little waste produced CON Relatively expensive (High construction and maintenance costs) Structure highly radioactive – for a short time
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0.001 $ / kWhr internal costs: costs of constructing, fuelling, operating, and disposing of power stations external costs: “estimated” impact costs to the environment, public and worker health, Prospects for fusion electricity, I. Cook et al. Fus. Eng. & Des. 63-34, pp25-33, 2002 The case for fusion energy : fusion economics
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Fusion: a safe, relatively inexpensive source of energy for which we have an inexhaustible supply of fuel ITER is – undoubtedly – “the way”
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Why isn’t Australia – pioneers in the field of fusion physics - involved in the ITER project??
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THE END
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LHC: the Large Hadron Collider 7 TeV = 7,000,000,000,000 eV
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