Is General Fusion and Magnetized target fusion legit?

In summary, there is an article in Popular Science about a company called General Fusion that claims they will have fusion reactors with net power in five years. However, this has raised doubts about the legitimacy of their claims and whether they will follow in the footsteps of other unsuccessful companies. The technique they are using, Magnetized Target Fusion, has a disclaimer on the Wikipedia article and some question if the article was provided by someone associated with General Fusion. LANL is also working on a similar experiment, but doubts remain about the feasibility and cost effectiveness of fusion energy. Some believe that General Fusion's idea is valid, but others are skeptical due to potential complications and high costs. The company is seeking funding and it remains to be seen if they will be successful
  • #1
Monocles
466
2
I just read an article in the most recent Popular Science about a company, General Fusion, claiming that they would have fusion reactors with net power in FIVE YEARS. Of course, this sent alarm bells off in my head, and I'm wondering if there is any legitimacy to what they're doing, or if they're going to get someone to invest in them and then disappear like so many other crackpots.

Here is the wikipedia article on the technique they're using: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magnetized_target_fusion
 
Engineering news on Phys.org
  • #2
Monocles said:
I just read an article in the most recent Popular Science about a company, General Fusion, claiming that they would have fusion reactors with net power in FIVE YEARS. Of course, this sent alarm bells off in my head, and I'm wondering if there is any legitimacy to what they're doing, or if they're going to get someone to invest in them and then disappear like so many other crackpots.
Such claims set of alarm bells for me.

Note the disclaimer on the Wikipedia MTF article: This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding reliable references. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.

Could the Wikipedia article have been provided by someone with or associated with General Fusion?

I guess we'll know in 5 years.


Meanwhile - here is some information about MTF on the LANL website.
http://wsx.lanl.gov/mtf.html
http://fusionenergy.lanl.gov/

An experiment to produce a high density field reversed configuration plasma (FRC) is
operating at LANL. Plasma formation, characterization, and translation tests are in progress.
The FRC plasma injector will be used for an eventual magnetized target fusion demonstration
experiment at the Air Force Research Laboratory Shiva Star facility.
http://wsx.lanl.gov/MTF/FRX-L-OS-flyer2.pdf
 
  • #3
Here is a link to the article (hopefully I am allowed to post this)

http://www.popsci.com/scitech/article/2008-12/machine-might-save-world

It's kind of interesting, although I have no idea how legit nuclear fusion is.

In 2006 it proved that a shock wave -- created by a massive pulse of electricity, for experimental purposes -- can compress a little bit of plasma quickly and violently enough to generate a fusion reaction, however tiny.
 
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  • #4
They'll undoubtedly produce fusion energy, you can do this with a deuteron beam striking a tritiated target - the trick is to produce so very much fusion energy that you offset the enormous costs involved with making it in the first place. Here they will fail, unless 70+ years of work by many thousands of very smart people based on relatively simple physics and a lot of experiments is all wrong.
 
  • #5
JeffKoch said:
They'll undoubtedly produce fusion energy, you can do this with a deuteron beam striking a tritiated target - the trick is to produce so very much fusion energy that you offset the enormous costs involved with making it in the first place. Here they will fail, unless 70+ years of work by many thousands of very smart people based on relatively simple physics and a lot of experiments is all wrong.

Perhaps, but GF is not a crackpot outfit. Kirkpatric of LANL, a long time MTF player, did a review for them:
http://www.generalfusion.com/files/external_review.pdf

Makes sense, as LANL seems to be the govt. go to lab for MTF. They see MTF as a Lawson criterion middle ground between magnetic confinement and inertial implosion, with middling densities (10^17cm^-3), temperatures (200eV), and confinement times (microseconds) which allows them to build far more cheaply.
http://wsx.lanl.gov/mtf.html
 
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  • #6
I have the very magazine you are speaking of right next to me and i just finished reading the article. I was thinking exactly the same thing. They have a miniature prototype already functional, but as someone else said, it produces far less energy than it consumes, about 100 trillion times less. If you want more info, check out their website at http://www.generalfusion.com/

But yeah, so far their idea seams valid, but many scientist are waiting for that one unexpected glitch in the system that will make them have to complicate their designs and sky-rocket the price. They themselves though believe it will work eventually with enough funding, about 50 million dollars of it.

I guess we'll just have to wait and see if this really does work. I am somewhat doubtful but i really cannot say truthfully that this will not work.
 
  • #7
I have no sufficient knowledge about fusion hence no opinion about their chances to produce a net energy.
But I do have experience about shocks, mechanical engineering with big forces over short times, and precise control, as I developed hardware for crash-test, which includes reproducing precisely with big actuators the movements of an accident (fun, yes).

So my impression for this part of their project, that is the ~220 hammers:

They want 100m/s and this produces a shock wave at about the absolute maximum yield strength of the very best non-brittle alloys. Here I doubt because of stress concentration. But at 30m/s my parts didn't wear out, and 50m/s must be possible, so if 100m/s fail, a bigger sphere may compensate the slower hammers.

They need around 1µs precision on the shock datum over all hammers. Using the fastest hydraulic servo-valves (do they have valves?) with 10-20ms reaction time, we achieved 100µs precision more or less, after painstaking optimization.

But here are my two cents worth of enabling technology:
http://saposjoint.net/Forum/viewtopic.php?f=49&t=2774 (visitors can't watch the drawings at Sapo's website, pity)
http://www.scienceforums.net/topic/58924-magnetized-target-fusion/ (there visitors can, and my text is more concise)
- An eddy current brake, fast and finely adjustable, to control the movement of the hammers pushed by full force
- A fast unlocker to release the hammers within 1ms, easing subsequent control
- Maybe a displacement sensor for the hammers. At least speed and resolution look feasible, but intuition would shout to keep shocks and optics apart.

Marc Schaefer, aka Enthalpy
 
  • #8
I would think the details of this problem have already been worked out with chemical explosive driven nuclear implosion devices, the requirements and limitations known. None of those details would be in the public domain, but perhaps a yes/no answer could be produced?
 
  • #9
Explosive compression of plutonium spheres is described in textbooks, at least the general idea and the detonators. Spooks nevertheless take it as an excuse to designate as secret the texts describing it.

The very different feature is that you don't reuse a bomb, whereas General Fusion wants to make one shock a second. Explosive for instance would be difficult to replenish fast enough nor to produce at low energetic cost. As well, yield strength isn't a concern in a bomb.

For reuse, General Fusion wants to have sort of pneumatic jackhammers. There, no permanent damage is allowed, and synchronization of slower mechanical movements is more difficult.

And if the guys there achieve a nice compression, their design would be of no interest to ignite a bomb. Explosives are so much smaller and easier!
 
  • #10
Enthalpy said:
...

The very different feature is that you don't reuse a bomb, whereas General Fusion wants to make one shock a second. ...
Yes of course, but a shock wave from a hammer or a charge is still a shock wave, that travels with speed x through material y, etc, etc. Before working on repeat-ability the MTF people need show that they can produce a given fusion energy once.
 
  • #11
Yes.

From what I read too quickly, the same guys have already fused deuterium (I mean D-D, not the easier D-T) using electromagnetic actuators on magnetized target fusion. Their present goal is to synchronize hammers, as a better method for compression.

One-shot hammers and chisels could be an intermediate step. From what I experimented at crash-test, reusable shock hardware is a difficulty per se, so such an intermediate step would not be near to the full step. The way I read their documents, they seek reusable hardware.

Also: one-shot hardware makes experiments much more difficult, lengthy, unreliable. I'd try very hard to go directly to reusable hardware, for ease of experimenting, and to show a more convincing proof.
 
  • #12
mechanical parts timed to like 100nanosecond? I'm not from Missouri but that one i'll have to see.

old jim
 
  • #13
jim hardy said:
mechanical parts timed to like 100nanosecond? I'm not from Missouri but that one i'll have to see.

old jim
With active, adaptive feedback on hammer timing less than 100ns would not surprise me, though it might prove very expensive.
 
  • #14
Everyone agrees this is a seriously difficult part of the project! General Fusion does, I do, funds providers do - and want to see the synchronized hammers as the next enabling step.

Having seen time accuracy around 100µs in crash-test technology, where our actuators had 20ms response time, I imagine General Fusion can achieve the required 1µs with actuators responding in 1ms, for instance the ones I proposed.

Expensive... In development time, sure. But compare with a pressurized water plant: using existing technology, they sell for 3G€. And worse, compare with the development time of competing fusion devices like Iter or Nif: I would largely prefer to develop the very precise hammers than the other challenges.

Every new technology needs development, and hard one. We may forget it as it gets common, but for instance piston seals and tyres that last for >100,000km were incredibly difficult to invent. Pneumatic tyres looked impossible before someone convinced himself it was the right way, and eventually found the proper elastomer, reinforcements, seals, fastening...
 
  • #15
They are using piezo brakes to slow down their pistons so they arrive with the correct timing. I think the jitter they are looking for is around 20us.
 
  • #16
ScienceDude said:
They are using piezo brakes to slow down their pistons so they arrive with the correct timing. I think the jitter they are looking for is around 20us.
I don't know, but that (20us) sounds too long, given that a fission weapon completes detonation in less time, maybe 0.1 us?
 
  • #17
They are doing MTF, magnetized target fusion, so they probably have some confinement of their plasma. Think ITER with seconds of confinement, vs NIF or a nuke with no confinment but really high power. They are somewhere in the middle.
 

1. Is General Fusion and Magnetized target fusion a viable form of energy production?

There is ongoing research and development in the field of fusion energy, including General Fusion and Magnetized target fusion. While there have been promising results and advancements, it is not yet a commercially viable form of energy production. More research and development is needed before it can be considered a reliable energy source.

2. How does General Fusion and Magnetized target fusion differ from traditional fusion reactors?

General Fusion and Magnetized target fusion use different methods to confine and heat the plasma, which is necessary for fusion reactions. Traditional fusion reactors, such as tokamaks, use magnetic fields to contain the plasma, while General Fusion and Magnetized target fusion use compression techniques and magnetic fields, respectively. Additionally, General Fusion and Magnetized target fusion aim to achieve a much smaller and more compact design compared to traditional fusion reactors.

3. What are the potential benefits of General Fusion and Magnetized target fusion?

If successful, General Fusion and Magnetized target fusion could provide a nearly limitless source of clean energy, with no greenhouse gas emissions and minimal waste. It could also reduce dependence on fossil fuels and help mitigate climate change. Additionally, the compact size of these fusion reactors could make them more feasible for use in remote areas or on spacecraft.

4. What are the main challenges facing General Fusion and Magnetized target fusion?

The main challenge for General Fusion and Magnetized target fusion is achieving and maintaining the necessary conditions for sustained fusion reactions. This includes controlling and confining the plasma, generating enough heat to reach fusion temperatures, and sustaining the reaction for a significant amount of time. There are also technological and engineering challenges in designing and building these fusion reactors.

5. When can we expect to see General Fusion and Magnetized target fusion being used on a large scale?

It is difficult to predict an exact timeline for when General Fusion and Magnetized target fusion will be used on a large scale. While there have been promising developments, there is still much research and development needed before it can be considered a viable and commercially available energy source. It is estimated that it could take several more decades before General Fusion and Magnetized target fusion reactors are fully developed and implemented on a large scale.

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