Fusion basics Nuclear fusion occurs when the
nuclei of two atoms approach closely enough for the
nuclear force to pull them together into a single larger nucleus. The strong force is opposed by the
electrostatic force created by the positive charge of the nuclei's
protons, pushing the nuclei apart. The amount of energy that is needed to overcome this repulsion is known as the
Coulomb barrier. The amount of energy released by the fusion reaction when it occurs may be greater or less than the Coulomb barrier. Generally, lighter nuclei with a smaller number of protons and greater number of
neutrons will have the greatest ratio of energy released to energy required, and the majority of
fusion power research focusses on the use of
deuterium and
tritium, two
isotopes of
hydrogen. Even using these isotopes, the Coulomb barrier is large enough that the nuclei must be given great amounts of energy before they will fuse. Although there are a number of ways to do this, the simplest is to heat the gas mixture, which, according to the
Maxwell–Boltzmann distribution, will result in a small number of particles with the required energy even when the gas as a whole is relatively "cool" compared to the Coulomb barrier energy. In the case of the D-T mixture, rapid fusion will occur when the gas is heated to about 100 million degrees.
Confinement This temperature is well beyond the physical limits of any material container that might contain the gases, which has led to a number of different approaches to solving this problem. The main approach relies on the nature of the fuel at high temperatures. When the fusion fuel gasses are heated to the temperatures required for rapid fusion, they will be completely
ionized into a plasma, a mixture of
electrons and nuclei forming a globally neutral gas. As the particles within the gas are charged, this allows them to be manipulated by electric or magnetic fields. This gives rise to the majority of controlled fusion concepts. Even if this temperature is reached, the gas will be constantly losing energy to its surroundings (cooling off). This gives rise to the concept of the "confinement time", the amount of time the plasma is maintained at the required temperature. However, the fusion reactions might deposit their energy back into the plasma, heating it back up, which is a function of the density of the plasma. These considerations are combined in the
Lawson criterion, or its modern form, the fusion triple product. In order to be efficient, the rate of fusion energy being deposited into the reactor would ideally be greater than the rate of loss to the surroundings, a condition known as "ignition".
Magnetic confinement fusion approach In
magnetic confinement fusion (MCF) reactor designs, the plasma is confined within a vacuum chamber using a series of magnetic fields. These fields are normally created using a combination of
electromagnets and
electrical currents running through the plasma itself. Systems using only magnets are generally built using the
stellarator approach, while those using current only are the
pinch machines. The most studied approach since the 1970s is the
tokamak, where the fields generated by the external magnets and internal current are roughly equal in magnitude. In all of these machines, the density of the particles in the plasma is very low, often described as a "poor vacuum". This limits its approach to the triple product along the temperature and time axis. This requires magnetic fields on the order of tens of
Teslas, currents in the megaampere, and confinement times on the order of tens of seconds. Generating currents of this magnitude is relatively simple, and a number of devices from large banks of
capacitors to
homopolar generators have been used. However, generating the required magnetic fields is another issue, generally requiring expensive
superconducting magnets. For any given reactor design, the cost is generally dominated by the cost of the magnets. == Beta ==