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News from EUROfusion: Joint European Torus sets fusion energy record

Posted By Administration, Thursday 18 April 2024

This month you will find news from our Associate Member EUROfusion.


JET Tokamak’s Latest Fusion Energy Record Shows Mastery of Fusion Processes

In a major scientific achievement, European researchers at the Joint European Torus (JET) facility have set a new world energy record of 69 megajoules released in a sustained and controlled fusion power pulse.

The result came as part of an experimental campaign to verify operating scenarios for future fusion machines, under conditions as close as possible to those in ITER and future fusion power plants. The result was made possible through the dedication of the international team of scientists and engineers at JET and reflects the central role that JET has played in accelerating the development of fusion energy.

Deuterium-Tritium campaign

In September 2023, the EUROfusion consortium of fusion laboratories around Europe started an ambitious experimental campaign at the JET facility of the UK Atomic Energy Authority (UKAEA) in Culham, UK. Their goal: to test out operating scenarios extrapolated from small and medium size European devices to pave the way for the international ITER project and the fusion power plants to follow. JET is unique amongst present-day tokamak machines—which trap a donut-shaped cloud of hot, ionised fuel or plasma in a cage of magnetic fields—for its capability to work with the deuterium-tritium fuel that will form the basis of future fusion machines like ITER and the demonstration power plant DEMO.

Reproducible energy record

Using advanced scenarios to structure and control their plasma, the researchers set a new fusion energy record of 69.26 megajoules of heat released during a single pulse in JET. Released over six seconds from only 0.21 milligrams of fuel, the energy record equals the energy released from burning 2 kilograms of coal. The JET record is 20 times the amount of energy released in a recent shot at the U.S. National Ignition Facility (NIF) at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in October 2023, which used a different approach to fusion to produce more energy than was absorbed by the fuel pellet. The new achievement by the EUROfusion team breaks their previous world records of 59 megajoules (2022) and 22.7 megajoules (1997), which were also set at JET. The scientists at JET were able to reliably reproduce the necessary fusion conditions for the new record in multiple experimental pulses, demonstrating the understanding and control they have achieved over the complex fusion processes.

Testing operating scenarios for ITER

The shots that broke JET’s previous fusion energy record came as a late addition to JET’s third and final run of deuterium-tritium experiments. The campaign was primarily designed as the first-ever opportunity to demonstrate that crucial operating scenarios for ITER will work in a deuterium-tritium environment with its abundant fusion reactions. “Perhaps even more interesting to me than the record is what we have achieved in terms of operating scenarios for ITER”, says the Head of EUROfusion’s Tokamak Exploitation Task Force, Emmanuel Joffrin from the French EUROfusion member CEA. “Not only did we demonstrate how to soften the harsh heat flowing from the plasma to the exhaust, we also showed in JET how we can get the plasma edge into a stable state thus preventing bursts of energy reaching the wall. Both techniques are intended to protect the integrity of the walls of future machines. This is the first time that we’ve ever been able to test those scenarios in a deuterium-tritium environment.” Dedicated upgrades over the past decade have brought JET’s technical specifications as close as possible to those of ITER, allowing for studies that will enable that future machine to hit the ground running when it enters operation.

Dr Fernanda Rimini, JET Senior Exploitation Manager, JET Scientific Operations Leader, said:“We can reliably create fusion plasmas using the same fuel mixture to be used by commercial fusion energy powerplants, showcasing the advanced expertise developed over time.”

Most approaches to creating commercial fusion favour the use of two hydrogen variants – deuterium and tritium. When deuterium and tritium fuse together they produce helium and release vast amounts of energy – a reaction that will form the basis of future fusion powerplants. Professor Ambrogio Fasoli, Programme Manager (CEO) at EUROfusion, said: “Our successful demonstration of operational scenarios for future fusion machines like ITER and DEMO, validated by the new energy record, instil greater confidence in the development of fusion energy. Beyond setting a new record, we achieved things we’ve never done before and deepened our understanding of fusion physics.”

UK Minister for Nuclear and Networks, Andrew Bowie, said: “JET’s final fusion experiment is a fitting swansong after all the groundbreaking work that has gone into the project since 1983. We are closer to fusion energy than ever before thanks to the international team of scientists and engineers in Oxfordshire. The work doesn’t stop here. Our Fusion Futures programme has committed £650 million to invest in research and facilities, cementing the UK’s position as a global fusion hub.”

Professor Sir Ian Chapman, UKAEA CEO, said: “JET has operated as close to powerplant conditions as is possible with today’s facilities, and its legacy will be pervasive in all future powerplants. It has a critical role in bringing us closer to a safe and sustainable future.”

JET concluded its scientific operations at the end of December 2023. The findings of JET’s research have critical implications not only for ITER—the fusion research mega-project being built in the south of France—but also for the UK’s STEP prototype powerplant, Europe’s demonstration powerplant, DEMO, and other global fusion projects, pursuing a future of safe, low-carbon, and sustainable energy.

Dr Pietro Barabaschi, ITER Director-General, said: “Throughout its lifecycle, JET has been remarkably helpful as a precursor to ITER: in the testing of new materials, in the development of innovative new components, and nowhere more than in the generation of scientific data from Deuterium-Tritium fusion. The results obtained here will directly and positively impact ITER, validating the way forward and enabling us to progress faster toward our performance goals once operation begins. On a personal note, it has been for me a great privilege having myself been at JET for a few years. There I had the opportunity to learn from many exceptional people.”

40 years of fusion science

JET has been the largest and most successful fusion experiment in the world, and a central research facility of the European Fusion Programme. The machine is based at the UKAEA campus in Culham, UK and has been a collective facility used by European fusion researchers under the management of the EUROfusion consortium—experts, students, and staff from across Europe and internationally, co-funded by the European Commission. A big aspect of its success was to show that large scientific projects can be done in a collaborative way on a global scale. Since its inception in 1983 as a joint European project, JET has been at the forefront of groundbreaking achievements, spearheading the pursuit of safe, low-carbon, and sustainable fusion energy solutions to meet the world’s future energy demands. Over its lifetime JET has delivered crucial insights into the complex mechanics of fusion, allowing scientists to plan the international fusion experiment ITER and DEMO, the demonstration fusion power plant currently under design by the European fusion community. Built by Europe and used collaboratively by European researchers over its lifetime, JET became UKAEA property in October 2021. The machine celebrated its 40th anniversary in June this year, and ceased plasma operations at the end of 2023, having created 105,842 pulses.

Fusion energy’s potential

Fusion, the process that powers stars like our sun, promises a clean baseload source of heat and electricity for the long term, using small amounts of fuel that can be sourced worldwide from inexpensive materials. Deuterium and tritium are two heavier variants of ordinary hydrogen and together offer the highest reactivity of all fusion fuels. At a temperature of 150 million degrees Celsius, deuterium and tritium fuse together to form helium and release a tremendous amount of heat energy without any greenhouse contributions. Fusion is inherently safe in that it cannot start a run-away process and produces no long-lived waste.

Original article released on the website of EUROfusion: Joint European Torus sets fusion energy record


More news from EUROfusion

Tags:  EPS AM  EPS Associate Members  EUROfusion  fusion  JET  Joint European Torus  tokamak 

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News from EUROfusion

Posted By Administration, Monday 18 October 2021
Updated: Tuesday 19 October 2021
Author: Gieljan de Vries

The European Physical Society and e-EPS are pleased to share the latest news for EUROfusion, an EPS Associate Member.

 

EUROfusion's new science exhibition brings fusion power to the people
https://www.euro-fusion.org/index.php?id=508

An actively cooled plasma exhaust for the WEST tokamak
https://www.euro-fusion.org/news/detail/an-actively-cooled-divertor-for-west/

Stellarator design of Wendelstein 7-X proves its efficiency
https://www.euro-fusion.org/news/detail/wendelstein-7-x-concept-proves-its-efficiency/

Artificial Intelligence helps instabilities in nuclear fusion
https://www.euro-fusion.org/news/detail/artificial-intelligence-helps-nuclear-fusion/

IBA, a sandblaster at the atomic level
https://www.euro-fusion.org/news/detail/a-sandblaster-at-the-atomic-level/

Growing diamond window panes for fusion reactor ITER
https://fusionforenergy.europa.eu/news/diamonds-and-flares-for-a-fusion-affair/

ITER starts new video series ITER Talks to inform and inspire about fusion
https://www.iter.org/newsline/-/3648
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kDaTQSmsJC8&list=PLgfqoaB5_JWSCm2bO37NcTfALPrBA5CC0

Tags:  EUROfusion  exhibition  IBA  ITER  nuclear fusion  Nuclear Physics  tokamak  Wendelstein 7-X 

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News from EUROfusion

Posted By Administration, Thursday 10 June 2021
Updated: Friday 11 June 2021
Author: EUROfusion

Good news for fusion heat exhaust from the new MAST-Upgrade tokamak
Read the full article on the website of UKAEA, UK Atomic Energy Authority.

Dutch researchers investigate a liquid metal inner wall for future fusion reactors
Publication from DIFFER, Dutch Institute for Fundamental Energy Research.

HELZCA, the new European facility for heat-testing ITER components
Article published on the website of Fusion for Energy, the European Union organisation managing Europe’s contribution to ITER.

Hungary’s secret to growing top fusion talent
Work on projects with researchers from BSc year one. Complete article on EUROfusion.

Danish universities join fusion forces in new research consortium
Full article on EUROfusion.


Tags:  DIFFER  EEUROfusion  EPS Associate Members  Europe  F4E  facility  Fusion for Europe  HELZCA  ITER  tokamak 

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Development and application of GEM detectors for fusion measurements – IPPLM Laboratory of X-ray Diagnostics

Posted By Administration, Thursday 10 June 2021
Updated: Friday 11 June 2021

Author: IPPLM


In 2014, a new Laboratory (Laboratory of X-ray Diagnostics) was established at the Institute of Plasma Physics and Laser Microfusion (www.ifpilm.pl) addressing the needs of plasma fusion for new technologies development. Its main activity is related to the development of Gas Electron Multiplier(GEM) based detectors with an ultimate goal of their application in fusion. The GEM detectors were discovered at CERN and used for the first time for nuclear physics research (https://gdd.web.cern.ch/). Considering their unique capabilities, the IPPLM researchers in collaboration with University of Warsaw and the Warsaw University of Technology proposed their usage for the fusion plasma measurements. The main goal is the detection of soft X-ray radiation emitted from plasma produced in existing or future fusion devices, which delivers information about various important plasma parameters. The Laboratory is engaged in detectors design, development and testing of the final product, being equipped with modern diagnostic tools and necessary measurement equipment.

The Laboratory conducts development work on the structure and implementation of GEM detectors. Our main tasks are the design of the sensor structure, building prototype components, assembly of the detecting module and their further experimental and numerical studies towards the purpose of soft X-ray imaging of plasma structures and monitoring of plasma impurities (such as e.g. tungsten – material foreseen for the divertor material in ITER).

GEM technology is  relatively new but has been already proven as a robust one. The “engine” of the detector is a GEM foil, 50 μm thick Kapton foil, densely perforated, covered on both sides with a thin layer (5 μm) of copper. This foil becomes an effective amplifying element even in case a moderately high voltage is applied to its sides, hence reducing the probability of spontaneous discharges.

For the needs of research activities conducted within the Laboratory of X-ray Diagnostics, the IPPLM has been equipped with a modern clean room which includes professional equipment used exclusively for the preparation of detector components and their final assembly. In this room, all works connected with the assembly of detectors are performed. This ranges from the preparation of frames, gluing the window's foils, conducting all the intermediate stages of assembly works, up to the assembly of the final sensor. In addition, there is a fully equipped modern measurement laboratory where preliminary measurements and studies are conducted before the final decision is made on the constructed device as well as the conclusive tests before the detector is finally approved.

The advantages of the developed detectors allow the IPPLM researchers to apply them for plasma impurity monitoring at tokamak devices (WEST, JET, etc.), where the plasma contamination occurs due to the interaction of the plasma with the surrounding surfaces, i.e. with the materials of the first wall of the tokamak chamber. As impurities cause plasma energy losses due to an increase of radiation emission generated by partially ionised atoms such a task is extremely important for fusion devices. Therefore, an appropriate diagnostic tool is needed, which would be able not only to monitor the level of the generated impurities, but also to reconstruct their spatial distribution.

The IPPLM, together with the collaborators, contributes to the development of diagnostics on the WEST and JET tokamaks by the design, construction and installation of the GEM detectors for plasma monitoring. The detectors are currently working at the above mentioned two important research centers. The first diagnostics was built and installed in collaboration with the University of Warsaw and the Warsaw University of Technology at the JET tokamak (Culham, UK) in 2014. Another diagnostics aimed at preparation of the radiation tomography was built in collaboration with the Warsaw University of Technology. It has been under tests at the WEST device (Cadarache, France) since 2017. This research is still ongoing on the last detector, in the frame of soft X-ray tomography diagnostics, to be installed at the WEST device in the nearest future.

Thanks to the experience gained over the years in the development of diagnostics based on the GEM detectors, the IPPLM has become a part of important scientific programmes performed at JET and WEST tokamaks, ITER-oriented tokamaks, which means that the IPPLM contributes also to the development of the scientific programme for ITER.

Clean room. Image: IPPLM

Tags:  GEM detectors  IPPLM  ITER  microfusion  plasma physics  tokamak  X-rays imaging 

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