Mirror confinement
- Also called:
- fusion power plant or thermonuclear reactor
An alternative approach to magnetic confinement is to employ a straight configuration in which the end loss is reduced by a combination of magnetic and electric plugging. In such a linear fusion reactor the magnetic field strength is increased at the ends. Charged particles that approach the end slow down, and many are reflected from this “magnetic mirror.” (The same magnetic reflection mechanism traps particles in the Earth’s magnetosphere, specifically in the Van Allen radiation belts.) Unfortunately, particles with extremely high speed along the field are not stopped by the mirror. To inhibit this leakage, electrostatic plugging is provided. An additional section of plasma is added at each end beyond the magnetic mirror. The plasma in these “end plugs” produces an electrostatic potential barrier to nuclei. The overall configuration is called a tandem mirror.
Plasma heating
A plasma needs to be heated to about 100,000,000 K for fusion reactions to take place. Two plasma-heating methods have been highly developed: electromagnetic wave heating and neutral-beam injection heating. In the former, electromagnetic waves are directed by antennas at the surface of the plasma. The waves penetrate the plasma and transfer their energy to the constituent particles. Ionized gases can support the propagation of a remarkably large variety of waves not found in other forms of matter. Effective wave-heating techniques employ frequencies from the radio-frequency range to the microwave range. Power absorption often relies upon a resonant interaction between the wave and plasma. For example, if the frequency of the electromagnetic wave is equal to the frequency at which a nucleus gyrates about a magnetic field line, this resonant nucleus absorbs energy from the wave. This technique is called ion cyclotron resonance heating. Similarly, electron cyclotron resonance heating may be used to heat electrons. Such electron heating requires very high frequencies (tens to hundreds of gigahertz), such as produced by free-electron lasers and gyrotron tubes.
In the second method, beams of neutral atoms at high energy (up to about one million electron volts) are injected into the plasma, rather as in the neutral-beam current drive described above. When used for heating, however, the beams are injected in both directions around the torus, so that no net momentum is imparted to the plasma. The slowing down, or transfer of beam energy to the plasma, constitutes the heating mechanism.
Principles of inertial confinement
In an inertial confinement fusion (ICF) reactor, a tiny solid pellet of fuel—such as deuterium-tritium (D-T)—would be compressed to tremendous density and temperature so that fusion power is produced in the few nanoseconds before the pellet blows apart. The compression is accomplished by focusing an intense laser beam or a charged particle beam, referred to as the driver, upon the small pellet (typically 1 to 10 mm in diameter). For efficient thermonuclear burn, the time allotted for the pellet to burn must be less than the disassembly time. This means that, in the compressed state, the product of the pellet mass density and the pellet radius must exceed about 3 grams per square centimetre. A high mass density will hasten the burn, and a large radius will slow the disassembly time. The ratio of fusion energy produced in the pellet explosion to the driver energy is called the pellet gain. High pellet gains of 100 or more are required for an ICF reactor.
Pellets are multilayered, consisting of several concentric spheres. The surface of the pellet is ionized by the driver beam, and ablation of the ionized material generates a large inward force on the pellet. Recoil from the ablation implodes the inner layer, producing a shock wave that compresses the inner layers of the D-T fuel. The implosion speed is several hundred kilometres per second, produced by a force equivalent to some 10 billion atmospheres. The target layers are designed such that the laser or particle-beam energy provides compression, not heat (entropy), during this stage. At the final stage of compression, the pellet is compressed to 1,000 to 10,000 times the density of typical solids.
In conventional ICF (usually referred to as shock-heated ICF), the laser or particle-beam energy pulses are accurately set such that the shocks produced during the implosion phase converge in the centre of the pellet, heating it to fusion temperatures. The burn initiates in the central D-T layer and spreads outward as the alpha particles collide with and heat the rest of the pellet to a value sufficient to produce fusion reactions. Ignition occurs, and the pellet, now a dense plasma, is burned up in a small microexplosion. An alternative method for ICF, known as fast ignition, has emerged in recent years because of rapid progress in generating intense picosecond (10−12 second) laser systems. Fast ignition can reduce the driver energy considerably. In this scheme, the main laser or particle beam is used to compress the fuel similar to shock heating. Then a short, intense laser pulse heats a small portion of the compressed fuel to fusion temperature, initiating the fusion burn. This approach may lead to target gains that are 3 to 10 times larger than in shock heating.
It is essential that the implosion of the outer layer of the target be symmetric and uniform to a high degree of accuracy. Any asymmetry can grow during compression, and, more important, the shocks may not precisely converge on the centre, which would prevent ignition of the fuel. Thus, the pellet must be manufactured with a high degree of smoothness, with tolerances of less than a thousandth of a millimetre. The driver should also deposit its energy on the pellet uniformly, with a variation of less than 1 percent. There are two methods to achieve this uniformity. In the first method, known as indirect drive, the pellet is located inside a hollow cylindrical shell known as a hohlraum, and the driver is aimed at the walls of the hohlraum. The hohlraum absorbs the driver’s energy and then radiates the target with intense X-rays, which cause the pellet to heat and implode. Because a hohlraum is effectively a resonant cavity, the X-ray intensity on the target will be quite uniform even if few driver beams are used. The drawback of this technique is that the target gain is reduced because of inefficiency in converting the driver energy to X-rays. A higher gain is seen in the second method, known as direct drive, but here the driver system is much more complex, as many driver beams and special optical elements are needed to achieve the necessary uniform delivery of energy to the target.