Magnetic-Confinement Fusion Without the Magnets (2024)

Zap Energy’s FuZE-Q demonstration reactor is slated for completion in mid-2022.

Tokamaks, which use magnets to contain the high-temperature plasma in which atomic nuclei fuse and release energy, have captured the spotlight in recent months, due to tremendous advances in superconducting magnets. Despite these gains, though, traditional magnetic-confinement fusion is still years away from fulfilling nuclear fusion’s promise of generating abundant and carbon-free electricity.

But tokamaks aren’t the only path to fusion power. Seattle-based Zap Energy’s FuZE-Q reactor, scheduled to be completed in mid-2022, bypasses the need for costly and complex magnetic coils. Instead, the machine sends pulses of electric current along a column of highly conductive plasma, creating a magnetic field that simultaneously confines, compresses, and heats the ionized gas. This Z-pinch approach—so named because the current pinches the plasma along the third, or Z, axis of a three-dimensional grid—could potentially produce energy in a device that’s simpler, smaller, and cheaper than the massive tokamaks or laser-fusion machines under development today.

Z-pinched plasmas have historically been plagued by instabilities. In the absence of a perfectly uniform squeeze, the plasma wrinkles and kinks and falls apart within tens of nanoseconds—far too short to produce useful amounts of electricity.

Zap Energy’s approach, which it calls sheared-flow stabilization, tames these instabilities by varying the flow of plasma along the column. The design sheathes the plasma near the column’s central axis with faster-flowing plasma—imagine a steady stream of cars traveling in the center lane of a highway, unable to change lanes because heavy traffic is whizzing by on both sides. That arrangement keeps the fusion-reactive plasma corralled and compressed longer than previous Z-pinch configurations could.

“We think our reactor is the least expensive, most compact, most scalable solution with the shortest path to commercially viable fusion power,” says Ben Levitt, Zap Energy’s director of research and development. Levitt predicts that Zap will reach Q=1, or scientific breakeven—the point at which the energy released by the fusing atoms is equal to the energy required to create the conditions for fusion—by mid-2023, which would make it the first fusion project to do so.

Given the long history of broken promises in fusion-energy research, that’s the sort of claim that warrants skepticism. But Zap’s ascent of a forbiddingly steep technology curve has been swift and impressive. The startup was founded in 2017 as a spin-off of the FuZE (Fusion Z-pinch Experiment) research team at the University of Washington. The company produced its first fusion reactions the very next year. Before the company’s founding, the university team had collaborated with Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory researchers. They won a series of U.S. Department of Energy grants that enabled them to test the sheared-flow approach at progressively higher energy levels. To date, the company has raised more than US $40 million.

Magnetic-Confinement Fusion Without the Magnets (6)As deuterium gas is injected into Zap Energy’s FuZE-Q reactor, electrodes introduce synchronous pulses, which strip electrons from the deuterium atoms to create a plasma, or ionized gas. The plasma accelerates toward the assembly region, where the current creates a radial shear, or pinch, in the plasma flow. This magnetic field maintains stability as it simultaneously confines, compresses, and heats the plasma to fusion conditions.Zap Energy

Thus far, experiments have confirmed simulations that predict the plasma will stay stable as Z-pinch currents are amped up. The new machine, budgeted to cost about $4 million, will dial up the strength of the pulses from 500 kiloamperes to more than 650 kA—the approximate threshold at which Levitt and his team believe they can demonstrate breakeven.

“Will the plasma stay stable as we keep increasing the energy we’re putting into it? That’s the trillion-dollar question,” Levitt says. “We have lots of high-fidelity simulations showing that the physics doesn’t change, that the sheared-flow mechanism works as we go to higher inherent energy. But we need proof, and we’re not that far away.”

The real world has often made a mockery of the most confident simulation-based predictions—especially in plasma physics, where unexpected instabilities tend to pop up with the slightest change in conditions. And even if the new FuZE-Q machine achieves scientific breakeven, it will be left to a future machine to produce the even higher currents necessary to surpass engineering breakeven, where the electric power at the output exceeds what’s needed to produce the fusion reaction. Zap hopes to reach that milestone in 2026.

“Will the plasma stay stable as we keep increasing the energy we’re putting into it? That’s the trillion-dollar question.”

—Ben Levitt, Zap Energy

“Going back decades, a lot of teams have tried to make the Z-pinch approach work, and now Zap has found a way to stabilize it with the sheared flow,” says Matt Moynihan, a former nuclear engineer for the Navy and a fusion consultant. “It’s exciting that it’s working under the conditions they’ve tested, but now we’ll need to see if that stability holds when they scale up the power enough to get net energy out of it.”

What no one disputes is the critical need for a carbon-free, always-available electricity source. Nuclear fusion could be it, but mainstream approaches are too costly and advancing too slowly to make an impact on the climate crisis. Zap’s reactor could also be applied someday to advanced space propulsion. Attached to a spacecraft, the end of a Z-pinch reactor could be left open to allow the fast-moving plasma to escape, releasing a jet of material that could propel a spacecraft forward.

At this point, both fusion-powered space flight and fusion-powered electricity remain in the theoretical realm—but Zap Energy is aiming for the stars.

This article appears in the January 2022 print issue as "A Pinch of Fusion."

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Magnetic-Confinement Fusion Without the Magnets (2024)

FAQs

What are the problems with magnetic confinement fusion? ›

The two main issues are the plasma confinement and the proper materials. The fusion plasma is very difficult to confine with the magnetic fields. The hot plasma tends to form instabilities and tries to escape from the magnetic confinement which results in cooling of the plasma and termination of the reaction.

What is the magnetic confinement fusion process? ›

5.2 Magnetic confinement fusion (MCF) MCF is an approach to generate thermonuclear fusion power that uses magnetic fields to confine the hot fusion fuel in the form of a plasma. Magnetic confinement is one of two major branches of fusion energy research, the other being inertial confinement fusion.

Can something be magnetic without being a magnet? ›

Electric currents can also produce magnetic fields. An electric current passing through a wire creates a circular magnetic field. The magnetic field created by an electric current near a conductor of power can also be used to create electric currents.

What is the confinement problem in a fusion reaction? ›

Plasma confinement refers to the containment of a plasma by various forces at the extreme conditions necessary for fusion. These conditions exist naturally in stars, where they are sustained by the force of gravity. In the laboratory, researchers use strong magnetic fields to confine plasma.

What are 3 problems with fusion? ›

I will focus now on three specific areas where materials impact fusion reactor design: the plasma-facing region, where there is high heat flux and particles are impacting the metal structure; the plasma-diagnostic, heating, and magnet systems; and the structure of the blanket and first-wall region surrounding the ...

What are 3 cons of fusion? ›

Fusion reactors: Not what they're cracked up to be
  • Scaling down the sun. ...
  • Tritium fuel cannot be fully replenished. ...
  • Huge parasitic power consumption. ...
  • Radiation damage and radioactive waste. ...
  • Nuclear weapons proliferation. ...
  • Additional disadvantages shared with fission reactors.
Apr 19, 2017

How hot is magnetic confinement fusion? ›

Creating energy from magnetic confinement fusion on Earth requires a temperature of about 200 million degrees Celsius, even higher than the temperature of nature's fusion reactor, the Sun's core, which is 15 million degrees Celsius.

What are the advantages of magnetic confinement fusion? ›

Magnetic confinement fusion releases an enormous amount of energy without emitting greenhouse gases and with the advantage of being virtually unlimited, imitating the natural reaction that powers stars.

What is the super magnet for nuclear fusion? ›

The new magnet, made from high-temperature superconducting material, achieved a field strength of 20 tesla, a world record for a large-scale magnet. That's the intensity needed to build a fusion plant producing more energy than it consumes, potentially ushering in an era of virtually limitless power production.

How to make something magnetic without a magnet? ›

Magnetizing Steel Bars Without Magnets:
  1. Strike a bar, either held vertically or pointed north, (some sources say soft iron and others say hardened iron or steel) several times on one end with a hammer.
  2. Hang a bar vertically for a lengthy but unspecified amount of time (probably a few days to a week or so).

Is there an alternative to magnets? ›

Engineers at Northeastern now believe they can solve the puzzle, and have patented a process to accelerate the creation of one such rare earth magnet alternative—a mineral known as tetrataenite, whose magnetic properties make it a leading candidate to replace magnets made of the scarce material.

Why is wood not magnetic? ›

A magnet is not attracted to materials such as wood because no internal field is induced in the wood. With no induced internal field, there is no field interaction and no attraction.

What is confinement fusion? ›

Inertial Confinement Fusion (ICF) achieves fusion conditions by rapidly compressing and heating a small quantity of fusion fuel. This results in a very high fuel pressure, which inevitably causes the fuel to disassemble. In ICF, the desired fusion burn must be completed before this fast disassembly occurs.

How to confine a magnetic field? ›

In a simple straight magnetic field, the plasma would be free to stream out the ends. End loss can be eliminated by forming the plasma and field in the closed shape of a doughnut, or torus, or, in an approach called mirror confinement, by “plugging” the ends of such a device magnetically and electrostatically.

What are the devices used in magnetic confinement? ›

Magnetic confinement fusion attempts to use the physics of charged particle motion to contain the plasma particles by applying strong magnetic fields. Tokamaks and stellarators are the two leading MCF device candidates as of today.

What are the problems with inertial confinement fusion? ›

The issues confronting this approach to controlled fusion are (1) developing a pellet driver (laser, particle beam) that efficiently converts electrical power into power on target, (2) focusing prodigious amounts of energy onto the pellet for a very short time, (3) effectively coupling this energy into the shell of the ...

What are the disadvantages of the magnetic effect? ›

Since generators use electromagnetic fields to produce electricity, these fields can be dangerous to some people who use sensitive medical equipment, such as pacemakers. These same electromagnetic fields can also interfere with other electrical and electronic devices, such as cell phones and computers.

What are the negative effects of magnetic field? ›

Symptoms of EMF exposure
  • sleep disturbances, including insomnia.
  • headache.
  • depression and depressive symptoms.
  • tiredness and fatigue.
  • dysesthesia (a painful, often itchy sensation)
  • lack of concentration.
  • changes in memory.
  • dizziness.

What is the main problem in getting fusion to occur? ›

Normally, fusion is not possible because the strongly repulsive electrostatic forces between the positively charged nuclei prevent them from getting close enough together to collide and for fusion to occur.

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