University of Texas-led Team Solves a Big Problem for Fusion Energy

Fusion reactor

Abundant, low-cost, clean energy took one step closer to reality, as a team of researchers from The University of Texas at Austin, Los Alamos National Laboratory, and Type One Energy Group solved a longstanding problem in the field.

One of the big challenges holding fusion energy back has been the ability to contain high-energy particles inside fusion reactors. When high-energy alpha particles leak from a reactor, that prevents the plasma from getting hot and dense enough to sustain the fusion reaction.

In their paper published in Physical Review Letters, the research team describes having discovered a shortcut that can help engineers design leak-proof magnetic confinement systems 10 times as fast as the gold standard method. This advance addresses the biggest challenge thatโ€™s specific to a type of fusion reactor first proposed in the 1950s, called a stellarator.

โ€œWhatโ€™s most exciting is that weโ€™re solving something thatโ€™s been an open problem for almost 70 years,โ€ said Josh Burby, assistant professor of physics at UT and first author of the paper. โ€œItโ€™s a paradigm shift in how we design these reactors.โ€

A stellarator uses external coils carrying electric currents that generate magnetic fields to confine a plasma and high-energy particles. This confinement system is often described as a โ€œmagnetic bottle.โ€

There is a way to identify where the holes are in the magnetic bottle using Newtonโ€™s laws of motion, which is very precise but takes an enormous amount of computational time. Worse still, to design a stellarator, scientists might need to simulate hundreds or thousands of slightly different designs, tweaking the layout of the magnetic coils and iterating to eliminate the holes.

To save time and money, scientists and engineers routinely use a simpler method for approximating where the holes are, using an approach called perturbation theory. But that method is much less accurate, which has slowed the development of stellarators. The new method relies on symmetry theory, a different way of understanding the system.

This work was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy.

Source: UT Austin (Edited by subcusa.com)

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