Mr. Fusion? Compact Fusion Reactor Will be Available in 5 Years Says Lockheed-Martin
Could
the future of fusion driven rockets for interplantary or even
interstellar travel be near at hand? Engineers at the Lockheed-Martin
Skunk Works believe they will have a compact fusion reactor prototype
operational in five years and in use within 10 years. (Illustration
Credit:© David A. Hardy/www.astroart.org, Project Daedalus)
But, let’s considers this story and where it all fits in both the history and future.
For every Skunk Works project that has made the runway such as the Stealth Fighter or SR-71 Blackbird, there are untold others that never see the light of day. This adds to the surprise and mystery of Lockheed-Martin’s willingness to release images and a detailed narrative describing a compact fusion reactor project. The impact that such a device would have on humanity can be imagined … and at the same time one imagines how much is unimaginable.
Lockheed-Martin
engineers in the Skunkworks prepare a vessel, one component of an
apparatus that they announced will lead to nuclear fusion in a
truck-sized reactor within 5 years. An international effort is underway
in Europe to create the world’s first practical tokamak fusion reactor, a
much larger and costlier design that has never achieved the long sought
“breakeven” point. (Photo Credit: Lockheed-Martin)
What exactly the prototype represents was left unexplained, however. Maguire continues by saying that in 10 years, the device will be seen in military applications and in 20 years it will be delivered to the world as a replacement for the dirty energy sources that are in use today. Military apps at 10 years means that the device will be too expensive initially for civilian operations but such military use would improve performance and lower costs which could lead to the 20 year milestone moment if all goes as planned.
Their system uses magnetic confinement, the same basic principle behind the tokamak toroidal plasma confinement system that has received the greatest attention and government funding for over 50 years.
The
ITER Tokamak Fusion Reactor is expected to begin operational testing in
2020 and begin producing deuterium-tritium fusion reactions in 2027.
(Credits: ITER, Illus. T.Reyes)
There are a few reasons Lockheed-Martin has gone out on a limb. Consider the potential. One ton of Uranium used in Fission reactors has as much energy as 1,500 tons of coal. But fission reactors produce radioactive waste and are a finite resource without breeder reactors, themselves a nuclear proliferation risk. Fusion produces 3 to 4 times more energy per reaction than fission. Additionally, the fuel — isotopes of hydrogen — is available from sea water — which is nearly limitless — and the byproducts are far less radioactive than with fission. Fusion generators once developed could provide our energy needs for millions of years.
More pragmatically, corporations promote their R&D. They are in a constant state of competition. They present a profile that ranges from the practical to the cutting edge to instill confidence in their Washington coffers. Furthermore, their competitors have high profile individuals and projects. A fusion project demonstrates that Lockheed-Martin is doing more than creating better mouse-traps.
To date, no nuclear fusion reactor has achieved breakeven. This is when the fusion device outputs as much energy as is input to operate it. Magnetic confinement such as the various tokamak designs, Lawrence Livermore’s laser-based inertial confinement method, and even the simple Philo Farnsworth Fusor can all claim to be generating energy from fusion reactions. They are just all spending more energy than their devices output.
An
example of a homemade Fusor. Originally invented in the 1960s by the
inventor of the television, Philo Farnsworth. (Credit: Wikipedia,
W.Jack)
It remains to be seen who, what and when a viable fusion reactor will be demonstrated. With Lockheed-Martin’s latest announcement, once again, fusion energy is “just around the corner.” But many skeptics remain who will quickly state that commercial fusion energy remains 50 years in the future. So long as Maguire’s team meets milestones with expected performance improvements, their work will go on. The potential of fusion energy remains too great to dismiss categorically.
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