U.S. officials hailed a milestone for fusion energy research Tuesday, even as they acknowledged fusion power plants harnessing the power of the sun to supply abundant clean energy may remain decades away at best.
A Dec. 5 fusion experiment at the Department of Energy's Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California released more energy than it applied to start the reaction, according to the researchers.
Livermore's 192 high-powered lasers helped to heat plasma inside a targeted fuel capsule the size of a pencil eraser to 150 million degrees Celsius, 10 times the temperature of the sun, for a tiny fraction of a second. As a result, the fuel released more energy than it absorbed, producing a «scientific energy breakeven,» also known as fusion ignition.
«America has achieved a tremendous scientific breakthrough,» Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm said at a packed Washington, D.C. press conference with the Livermore scientists.
But Livermore's experiment didn't come close to generating more energy that it consumed, because the lasers it briefly fires operate at less than 1% efficiency, meaning they use more than 100 times the energy they produce.
Each firing, known as a test shot, must be planned like a space launch, while the commercial fusion plant of the future will need to fuse hydrogen isotopes constantly on a scale that's orders of magnitude greater than achieved Dec. 5 at Livermore's National Ignition Facility (NIF), a 10-story building the size of three football fields.
The NIF was completed in 2009 at a cost of $3.5 billion.Its primary purpose is to conduct experiments ensuring the reliability of U.S. nuclear weapons in the absence of nuclear tests.
«There are very significant hurdles, not just in science but
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