ITER: Nuclear Fusion Reactor Agreement Signed

In summary, the international consortium signed a formal agreement to build a multibillion-dollar experimental nuclear fusion reactor. The $12.8 billion (€10 billion) reactor will be built in Cadarache, southern France, over the course of a decade, starting in 2008.
  • #1
Mk
2,043
4
http://www.newscientisttech.com/article.ns?id=dn10633&feedId=online-news_rss20
Well, it looks like everybody decided to do it! I didn't think that would happen.
A seven-member international consortium signed a formal agreement on Tuesday to build a multibillion-dollar experimental nuclear fusion reactor that will emulate the nuclear processes of the Sun.
[...]
Representatives from China, the European Union, India, Japan, Russia, South Korea and the United States signed the pact, sealing a decade of negotiations.

The $12.8 billion (€10 billion) reactor will be built in Cadarache, southern France, over the course of a decade, starting in 2008. Originally called the International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor, the facility is now known officially by its initials ITER (meaning "the way" in Latin).
 
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Physics news on Phys.org
  • #2
Mk said:
http://www.newscientisttech.com/article.ns?id=dn10633&feedId=online-news_rss20
Well, it looks like everybody decided to do it! I didn't think that would happen.
That's good news!
 
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  • #3
ITER is going to work?
That's what the $12.8 billion (€10 billion) is supposed to determine. There are many skeptics.
 
  • #4
I meant that they actually decided to do it! This isn't going to be like the SSC is it?
 
  • #5
Perhaps not. I'm sure the device will be constructed, rather than just dig a $2 billion hold in the ground.

Whether or not it will produce a sustainable fusion reaction, or one that will produce inexpensive electricity is another matter. I hope it works, but to be feasible long term, it needs to move away from DT and use DD or DHe3[/sub], but the He3[/sub] costs a lot and there is little indigenous supply. Getting it from the moon just isn't feasible.

I think they need to develop a HICP process.
 
  • #7
Well, we got a high of a .7Q rating in our current fusion research, and so I have no problem expecting at least 2Q in ITER. Like Astronuc said

That's what the $12.8 billion (€10 billion) is supposed to determine. There are many skeptics.

The money probably has gone into many reports about whether ITER will be a big success or not.

By the way, those who don't want ITER such as Greenpeace (or so I think) need to be introduced back to their old Physics books they had in High School, since they are stupid enough to think that fusion produces radioactive wastes.
 
  • #8
Greenpeace's argument is actually that this will take funding away from other renewable energy that they support, research on wind and solar power.
 
  • #9
theCandyman said:
Greenpeace's argument is actually that this will take funding away from other renewable energy that they support, research on wind and solar power.

Because everyone knows you should put your eggs in one basket, of course. As if 12 billion divided 7 ways over years mattered that much to the States.
 
  • #10
MadScientist 1000 said:
By the way, those who don't want ITER such as Greenpeace (or so I think) need to be introduced back to their old Physics books they had in High School, since they are stupid enough to think that fusion produces radioactive wastes.

I certainly do not support the Greenpeace radicals and their ignorant, destructive ideology. That aside - DT fusion has a much worse radiation problem than plain fission. It's not the endproducts of the DT reaction itself (plain, stable Helium); it's what all the reactor vessel and shielding becomes when exposed to very high-energy neutrons (neutron-induced radioactivity). Plus, there's that whole issue of metals becoming unpredictably brittle (wikipedia) on prolonged exposure to neutrons. And there are other surprises in the material science of high neutron flux, such as the buildup of Wigner energy (wiki) which resulted in the Windscale fire in '57.

These engineering issues will eventually be overcome (I expect); but we certainly don't have the answers yet, that's one of the objectives of the ITER experiment. And to say that desiging a reactor to withstand the high-energy neutrons of nuclear fusion is trivial, or cheap, or doesn't produce a bargeload of nuclear waste, is a gross misrepresentation of the endeavor.
 
  • #11
And speaking of "putting all eggs in one basket", we seem to have dropped an egg somewhere back in the 70's. It's the ordinary chicken egg of nuclear fission - plain, old, unexciting, but edible and http://www.iowaegg.org/iowaeggcouncil.asp?idSection=5 and using all proven technologies and existing expertise. We don't have to sit around idly while basic research drags on in fusion and cheap solar-electric materials - we could start building economical, carbon-neutral fission plants as early as tomorrow morning. (And that's only a slight rhetorical excess) And we have cheap, cheap fuel, and existing companies with experience in reactor vessels, and a whole shopping list of advanced techniques to drive down costs further (liquid sodium cooling). And we have a world-changing cataclysm of a greenhouse effect as incentive.
 
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  • #12
that whole issue of metals becoming unpredictably brittle (wikipedia) on prolonged exposure to neutrons. And there are other surprises in the material science of high neutron flux, such as the buildup of Wigner energy (wiki)
Well, there is already a lot of knowledge already of embrittlement and swelling of metals (particularly special steels and alloys) when exposed to high neutron fluences. Oak Ridge and Pacific Northwest Labs have had ongoing programs in this area. Nevertheless, the 14.1 MeV neutron from DT fusion does mean that materials will become activated over time. DD is better, but one still gets some DT, since T is a product in about 50% of DD fusions.

The Wigner energy is an issue with graphite, not metals.
 
  • #13
So in pebble-bed reactors Wigner energy could present problems?
 
  • #14
Mk said:
So in pebble-bed reactors Wigner energy could present problems?
No, because PB's run at high temperature, ~600-800°C, which is well above the 250°C annealing temperature of graphite, so Wigner energy is not an overwhelming safety issue. Nevertheless, it will be reviewed.
 

1. What is ITER?

ITER stands for International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor. It is an international project that aims to build a fusion reactor capable of producing clean and sustainable energy through nuclear fusion.

2. What is nuclear fusion?

Nuclear fusion is a reaction that occurs when two or more atomic nuclei combine to form a heavier nucleus. This process releases a tremendous amount of energy, similar to what happens in the core of the sun.

3. Why is ITER important?

ITER is important because it has the potential to provide a virtually limitless amount of clean and sustainable energy. It could also pave the way for other fusion reactors to be built, revolutionizing the way we produce energy.

4. Who is involved in the ITER project?

The ITER project involves 35 countries, including the United States, China, Russia, and the European Union. Each country contributes both financially and with scientists and engineers to help build and operate the reactor.

5. When will ITER be completed?

The construction of ITER began in 2010 and is expected to take around 15 years to complete, with the first plasma (the first step in the fusion process) expected in 2025. However, full power operation is not expected until 2035.

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