Diamond Member Pelican Press 0 Posted Tuesday at 03:00 PM Diamond Member Share Posted Tuesday at 03:00 PM This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up A private start-up called Helion aims to have a working fusion reactor by 2028 Building a working nuclear fusion reactor has proven to be a daunting challenge even for multiple wealthy nations, as we’ve seen with the This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up -delayed ITER project. However, a private start-up called Helion thinks it can build one and start supplying energy by 2028 by taking a different approach than other reactors. Founded in 2013, Helion is This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up thanks to a $425 million funding round, backed by billionaires like Sam Altman and Peter Thiel. With more than $1 billion raised, the company is now valued at $5.4 billion. Nuclear fusion, which combines hydrogen atoms to form helium, is the holy grail for green energy. It’s carbon free, and unlike current nuclear plants, produces no long-term radioactive waste. At the same time, reactors could produce enough electricity to power small cities. Sustained fusion reaction that produces more energy that it consumes has never happened, though. The largest project, ITER (International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor), is projected to cost up to $22 billion and won’t go online until at least 2034 — and still hasn’t produced a sustained reaction. The longest fusion raction is 1,066 seconds (17 minutes and 43 seconds), This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up by the EAST reactor in China. So how does Helion think it can succeed? Most experimental reactors compress plasma using magnetic or inertial confinement, which heats it enough to spark a fusion reaction. Once that happens, the fusion-generated heat powers a steam turbine to generate electricity. Helion is using a different approach by dispensing with the steam turbine. Fuel (deuterium and helium-3) is injected into both ends of the hourglass shaped reactor, then heated to form a plasma. Magnets form the plasma into a donut shape and fire them at each other at speeds up to 1 million MPH. They collide in the narrow middle section of the reactor and are further compressed by magnets there. That heats them up to the magic 100 million degrees Celcius, creating fusion. “As the plasma expands, it pushes back on the magnetic field from the machine’s magnets,” Helion explains on its website. “By Faraday’s Law, the change in field induces current, which is directly recaptured as electricity, allowing Helion’s fusion generator to skip the steam cycle.” This system is simpler and potentially more efficient than a steam turbine. However, while the company has achieved fast enough pulse rates to achieve fusion, it has only done so on a small scale to date. “There [are] some big engineering challenges to get to those high repetition rates at the kind of big pulse powers where we talk about millions of amps,” CEO David Kirtley told This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up . And that’s the rub with every other reactor. Fusion produces a huge surge of energy all at once and so far no one has been able to control and harness that. Helion thinks its simpler system will help, but has yet to prove it can do it experimentally, let alone commercially. Still, the company say sits seventh-generation reactor, Polaris, is now “in operation” but has declined to share any results to date. This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up #private #startup #called #Helion #aims #working #fusion #reactor This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up Link to comment https://hopzone.eu/forums/topic/202028-a-private-start-up-called-helion-aims-to-have-a-working-fusion-reactor-by-2028/ Share on other sites More sharing options...
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