Electric Fusion: Can High Energy Density Electric Fields Work?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the feasibility of achieving nuclear fusion using high energy density electric fields. Participants explore various methods of generating electric fields, the challenges associated with static versus dynamic fields, and the broader context of fusion technologies, including magnetic confinement and inertial confinement.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Debate/contested

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants question why fusion cannot be accomplished using high energy density electric fields.
  • One participant suggests that lasers generate high density electric fields but notes that they vary sinusoidically, contrasting this with the idea of a static field.
  • Concerns are raised about the practical difficulties in generating static high energy density fields, including cost and material limitations.
  • Another participant discusses the limitations of achieving the necessary electrostatic forces to overcome the Coulomb barrier between protons.
  • Methods for generating high electric fields are mentioned, including Van der Graaff machines and Cockcroft-Walton accelerators.
  • Participants discuss the relationship between electric and magnetic fields, with one asserting that they are fundamentally the same due to relativistic effects.
  • Magnetic confinement fusion is described as facing significant challenges, including material costs and the need for sustainable confinement fields.
  • Inertial confinement fusion is introduced as an alternative method, with references to facilities like the National Ignition Facility (NIF) and the Z Pinch machine.
  • Some participants express skepticism about the viability of cold fusion and discuss historical experiments related to it.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express multiple competing views regarding the feasibility of using electric fields for fusion, the effectiveness of magnetic confinement, and the potential of various fusion methods. The discussion remains unresolved with no consensus reached on the primary question of electric field-based fusion.

Contextual Notes

Participants highlight limitations related to the generation of high energy density fields, including the need for materials that can withstand high electric fields and the economic feasibility of constructing necessary devices. There is also mention of unresolved mathematical considerations regarding the forces required for fusion.

sid_galt
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Why can't fusion be accomplished using high energy density electric fields?
 
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I think we call the generators of high density electric fields, Lasers.
 
But the laser fields vary sinusoidically with time. I am talking about a static field which sort of pushes +ions together. What are the practical difficulties in generating those high energy density fields?
 
sid_galt said:
But the laser fields vary sinusoidically with time. I am talking about a static field which sort of pushes +ions together. What are the practical difficulties in generating those high energy density fields?

And what device do you think can generate such a thing? Google on the largest static field we have achieved so far.

You will notice that the highest electric field gradients that we can achieved in an accelerating structure of a particle accelerator is via using standing wave cavity of an oscillating EM field. It is prohibitively expensive, and technically unfeasable to construct a static accelerating field of the same magnitude. This is where you are going to be using up more power than you generate, so then what's the point in achieving fusion?

.. and I haven't even mentioned the materials aspect yet that can withstand such high fields without serious breakdown.

Zz.
 
Thank you for the reply.
What are the methods used for generating high electric fields? Do know a website which can tell me about the methods?
 
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Are static electric forces stronger that magnetic ?

How much voltage are we talking about ?
 
sid_galt said:
Why can't fusion be accomplished using high energy density electric fields?
In order to overcome the coulomb force between two protons you would need an electro static force greater than:

[tex]F = kq^2/r^2 = 9e9*(1.602e-19)^2/e-30 = 230N[/tex] per proton. A proton's cross sectional area is on the order of e-30 m. or less, so you would need a force/area of 2.3e32 N/m^2. Try to achieve that!

The real reason you could never achieve that kind of force with an electro-static field is because coulomb force has to come from electrons or protons. If you think about it, their static field can't produce a force/unit area greater than the force that you are trying to overcome.

AM
 
RoboSapien said:
Are static electric forces stronger that magnetic ?

RoboSapien,

Actually electric fields and magnetic fields are the same thing.

Magnetic fields are caused by the motion of electic fields.
Relativistic effects make the electric field look like a magnetic field.

Although it is frequently taught that Einstein developed Relativity to
explain the null result of the Michaelson-Morley experiment; Einstein's
true motivation was due to Maxwell's equations of electrodynamics.
The influence of the M-M experiment was rather indirect.

"The influence of the crucial Michelson-Morley experiment on my own
efforts has been rather indirect. I learned of it through H.A. Lorentz's
decisive investigations of the electrodynamics of moving bodies (1895)
with which I was acquainted before developing the special theory of
relativity . . . What led me more or less directly to the special theory of
relativity was the conviction that the electromotive force acting on a
body moving in a magnetic field was nothing else than an electric field.
"
-Albert Einstein


Dr. Gregory Greenman
Physicist
 
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  • #10
Morbius said:
... What led me more or less directly to the special theory of
relativity was the conviction that the electromotive force acting on a
body moving in a magnetic field was nothing else than an electric field.
"
-Albert Einstein
...
Thanks for the enlightenment sir. Thats going to help us very much in the future.
 
  • #11
Magnetic (we've already gotten past the EMF = movement of E fields part) confinement is most difficult because the various reactor designs all have faults that lead to less than optimal Lawson criterion.

Magnetic confinement fusion is like trying to squeeze jello with a cargo net. You need a very dense, indefinitely sustainable confinement field arrangement that can maintain the plasma at the necessary temperatures. Right now the biggest barriers in this regard are costs of materials to build large enough reactors, thermal and shielding limites of materials, and associated changes in magnetic properties.

It's a challenge that requires more resources (time, money, and man/brain-power) than are currently allotted (worldwide) to accomplish this any time in the forseeable future.
 
  • #12
Emfuser said:
...
Is there any other way in which fusion can be achived ? ( except cold fusion )
 
  • #14
ZapperZ said:

Zapper,

Exactly.

When magnetic forces are used to confine the plasma - it's called magnetic
confinement fusion.

However, the link above describes the process of "inertial confinement
fusion". One uses lasers, like at LLNL; to implode a small target of fusion
fuel. There's no attempt to contain the plasma - the plasma is contained
due to its own inertia for the brief period of time needed for the reactions
to take place.

The latest fusion laser at LLNL is the NIF - the National Ignition Facility.
This laser, as big as a sports arena; should be powerful enough to actually
achieve fusion ignition:

http://www.llnl.gov/str/September03/Moses.html

One can also do what LLNL does with lasers with big pulsed power
machines like at Sandia. The "Z Pinch" machine in action:

http://zpinch.sandia.gov/Z/Images/z.jpg

This machine puts very large currents into a series of wires. The current
and the magnetic field interact and implode the wire assembly and
compress a fusion target, similar to the way the LLNL lasers do.

Dr. Gregory Greenman
Physicist
 
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  • #15
RoboSapien said:
Is there any other way in which fusion can be achived ? ( except cold fusion )

Hydrogen bombs achieve fusion just fine, they just aren't terribly useful for generating power for peaceful ends.
 
  • #16
RoboSapien said:
Is there any other way in which fusion can be achived ? ( except cold fusion )

Fusion CAN be achieved with magnetic confinement, it's just not as easy as one might think when considering the initial ideas. The problems with magnetic confinement right now come down to what I said before: money and materials needed for a proper scale reactor.

Other methods of achieving fusion are inertial confinement (lasers), and inertial electrostatic, which is sort of hard to describe, but the device is small and makes an excellent table-top neutron generator. Unfortunately, we can't yet get a power gain out of any designs.

The Pons/Fleischmann experiements for cold fusion back in the late 80s were just bad science. My fusion prof back in school became visibly angered if you ever brought them up in class. The most promising idea for room-temperature devices for achieving fusion had something to do with imploding bubbles in acetone, but I don't know what progress (if any) was ever made on that one.
 
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  • #17
Emfuser said:
Fusion CAN be achieved with magnetic confinement, it's just not as easy as one might think when considering the initial ideas. The problems with magnetic confinement right now come down to what I said before: money and materials needed for a proper scale reactor.

Emfuser,

I don't think we can say that "Fusion CAN be achieved with magnetic
confinement.." quite yet. We do not as yet have a proof of principle for
fusion ignition via magnetic confinement.

As we have built larger and larger machines - like the family of tokamaks
at the Princeton Plasma Physics Lab; PLT [ Princeton Large Torus ] and
TFTR [ Tokamak Fusion Test Reactor ]; to name the latest two in the
series - we've seen more and more varied plasma instabilities that have
circumvented our quest for magnetic fusion.

Hopefully, the latest machine - the ITER - will be more successful.

The progress in inertial fusion has been more sustained. Inertial fusion
ignition has been accomplished in the aforemention hydrogen bombs -
but also the progress has been more sustained in the laser fusion arena.

The main problem facing laser fusion was to be able to drive a target
that was big enough - so that it could capture the product alpha particles
and achieve ignition. Calculations indicate that the new LLNL laser -
the NIF [ National Ignition Facility ] will be large enough and powerful
enough to achieve ignition [ hence the name ].

Dr. Gregory Greenman
Physicist
 
  • #18
Thanks ZapperZ
 
  • #19
Morbius said:
Emfuser,

I don't think we can say that "Fusion CAN be achieved with magnetic
confinement.." quite yet. We do not as yet have a proof of principle for
fusion ignition via magnetic confinement.

As we have built larger and larger machines - like the family of tokamaks
at the Princeton Plasma Physics Lab; PLT [ Princeton Large Torus ] and
TFTR [ Tokamak Fusion Test Reactor ]; to name the latest two in the
series - we've seen more and more varied plasma instabilities that have
circumvented our quest for magnetic fusion.

Hopefully, the latest machine - the ITER - will be more successful.

The progress in inertial fusion has been more sustained. Inertial fusion
ignition has been accomplished in the aforemention hydrogen bombs -
but also the progress has been more sustained in the laser fusion arena.

The main problem facing laser fusion was to be able to drive a target
that was big enough - so that it could capture the product alpha particles
and achieve ignition. Calculations indicate that the new LLNL laser -
the NIF [ National Ignition Facility ] will be large enough and powerful
enough to achieve ignition [ hence the name ].

Dr. Gregory Greenman
Physicist

Sure you can achieve fusion within current magnetic confinement devices. Whether or not you can achieve breakeven with any current device is a different story. ITER is (and forever will be, at this pace) slated to be the first magnetic confinement device to do that.
 
  • #20
Emfuser said:
Sure you can achieve fusion within current magnetic confinement devices. Whether or not you can achieve breakeven with any current device is a different story. ITER is (and forever will be, at this pace) slated to be the first magnetic confinement device to do that.

Emfuser,

If all you want is fusion reactions - then you don't need any containment
system - magnetic. inertial, or otherwise. You just hit your tritiated target
with a beam of deuterons out of a cyclotron.

Implicit in these discussions about the feasibility of fusion is that we are
talking about breakeven or better!

Otherwise, it's a moot, trivial point.

Dr. Gregory Greenman
Physicist
 
  • #21
ignoring cold fusion, I follow KISS(Keep It Simple Stupid), and believe Sandia is on the right track with the Z-Pinch and is only holding back since the facility costs billions less than the snotty and arogant physicists at NIF. Wouldn't it be a blow to them is Sandia achieved fusion years before them. Geez, KISS! Esp. since photons are just reactions due to a drop in energy, the real meat is in the mass itself.
 
  • #22
Are you referring to Sandia's Z-IFE project, Copious?

I have hopes they may one day be able to fuse light hydrogen atoms with heavier lithium or boron, as that process is aneutronic, and clean - no radioactive waste.
 
  • #23
sid_galt said:
Why can't fusion be accomplished using high energy density electric fields?

Since this thread was resurrected from the dead, I thought I'd address the OP's point directly.

You can accomplish fusion directly using electric fields. They don't even have to be that high density.

The inventor of television also invented an electrostatic fusion device called the Farnsworth fusor. Sometimes called IEC fusion (Inertial Electrstatic Confinement).

I've personally witnessed running fusion reactors in my friend's personal home labs. You can fuse deuterons easily and reliably with relatively primitive equipment, a vacuum chamber, 1 micron vacuum system, deuterium gas supply, a -30kV power supply, and suitable fittings and guages will do it.

See:

http://www.fusor.net/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fusor

Several universities have ongoing fusor research programs, most notably the University of Wisconsin and the University of Illinois Champagne/Urbana.

The problem with this approach, at the moment and for the foreseeable future, is that the energy required to acceleration deuterium ions to achieve fusion with current devices is mostly wasted so that fusors produce microwatt's of fusion with hundreds of watts of input power. The Q or efficiency is far below 1 at this point for even the best fusors.

Some people are working on improving the Q and I find this to be an exciting field as it is one where amateurs can actually make some progress since the devices cost in the thousands of $ rather than millions or billions. But for most people, it's just an interesting hobby rather than a serious attempt at scientific progress.
 
  • #24
Yes mugaliens that is the project. Hopefully some day we will hear good news.
 

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