A still more useful figure of merit is the "triple product" of density, temperature, and confinement time,
nTτE. For most confinement concepts, whether
inertial,
mirror, or toroidal confinement, the density and temperature can be varied over a fairly wide range, but the maximum attainable pressure
p is a constant. When such is the case, the fusion power density is proportional to
p2/
T 2. The maximum fusion power available from a given machine is therefore reached at the temperature
T where /
T 2 is a maximum. By continuation of the above derivation, the following inequality is readily obtained: :n T \tau_{\rm E} \ge \frac{12}{E_{\rm ch}}\,\frac{T^2}{\langle\sigma v\rangle} The quantity \frac{T^2}{\langle\sigma v\rangle} is also a function of temperature with an absolute minimum at a slightly lower temperature than \frac{T}{\langle\sigma v\rangle}. For the D-T reaction, the minimum occurs at
T = 14 keV. The average in this temperature region can be approximated as :\left \langle \sigma v \right \rangle = 1.1 \cdot 10^{-24} T^2 \; \frac{{\rm m}^3}{\rm s} \, {\rm ,} \quad {\rm T \, in \, keV} {\rm ,} so the minimum value of the triple product value at
T = 14 keV is about : \begin{matrix} n T \tau_E & \ge & \frac{12\cdot 14^2 \cdot {\rm keV}^2}{1.1\cdot 10^{-24} \frac{{\rm m}^3}{\rm s} 14^2 \cdot 3500 \cdot{\rm keV}} \approx 3 \cdot 10^{21} \mbox{keV s}/\mbox{m}^3 \\ \end{matrix} (3.5 \cdot 10^{28} \mbox{K s}/\mbox{m}^3) This number has not yet been achieved in any reactor, although the latest generations of machines have come close.
JT-60 reported 1.53×1021 keV.s.m−3. For instance, the
TFTR has achieved the densities and energy lifetimes needed to achieve Lawson at the temperatures it can create, but it cannot create those temperatures at the same time.
ITER aims to do both. As for
tokamaks, there is a special motivation for using the triple product. Empirically, the energy confinement time τ
E is found to be nearly proportional to
n1/3/
P 2/3. In an ignited plasma near the optimum temperature, the heating power
P equals fusion power and therefore is proportional to
n2
T 2. The triple product scales as : \begin{matrix}n T \tau_E & \propto & n T \left(n^{1/3}/P^{2/3}\right) \\ & \propto & n T \left(n^{1/3}/\left(n^2 T^2\right)^{2/3}\right) \\ & \propto & T^{-1/3} \\ \end{matrix} The triple product is only weakly dependent on temperature as
T -1/3. This makes the triple product an adequate measure of the efficiency of the confinement scheme. == Inertial confinement ==