Theoden said:
I have heard that fusion can generate power and potentially make breeder reactors obsolete; but to even bring atoms close enough to fuse, wouldn't take a significant amount of energy in the first place? I feel like we are allotting high voltage toward fusion and getting a lesser voltage from the output. I have also heard that fusion is a way to produce neutrons, but does not mixing beryllium and americium do the same?
There's some misperceptions here.
Firstly, the objective of controlled fission or fusion is to produce net energy. In the case of fission, the process involves a chain reaction in which neutrons are produced by fission, and at least one neutron from each reaction induces another fission. The fission process releases thermal energy in the fission process, and that energy heats water to produce steam (directly in a BWR, or indirectly in a PWR) or gas. The steam is used in a Rankine cycle, will gas is used in Brayton cycle, unless the gas is used to heat water to produce steam in a Rankine cycle, which then drives a turbine, which drives a generator, which provides AC electricity.
In fusion, rather than fissioning nuclei, we fuse nuclei, which recombine to more stable nuclei and in the process release kinetic energy. Now, if the nuclei and electrons can be collected directly (direct conversion), we could generate DC electricity, or if we can use the thermal energy of the plasma to expand against the magnetic field, we develop AC electricity. Otherwise, we have to settle for a net energy production in the form of thermal energy, and use a Rankine or Brayton cycle to produce AC electricity.
The objective with thermal energy is to use it in a thermodynamic cycle to drive a turbine to turn a generator to produce electricity, like most conventional thermal plants, and the voltage is stepped up for transmission. In stepping up the voltage, the transmission current drops.
The easiest fusion reaction is d+t (deuteron + triton), which produces a 14.1 MeV neutron and a 3.5 MeV alpha particle. The fast neutron has to be absorbed in a blanket, which is heat, while the alpha particle heats the plasma. Another reaction is d+d, which produces t+p, or n+He
3, and He
3 might react with d, to produce p+He
4. It turns out, fusion is not so easy, otherwise we'd have done it already.
The
241AmBe combination produces a low level of neutrons, by virtue of an (α,n) reaction (the α from Am hits a
9Be nucleus, which forms
12C + n), which is a good starting source to initiate a fission reactor, when there is no spontaneous fission or delayed neutrons, as in a fresh core. The AmBe reaction rate depends on the decay of
241Am, and one cannot simply turn it off, so it does not do for a primary power source.
https://e-reports-ext.llnl.gov/pdf/320035.pdf