Monday, December 28, 2020

China Built An Artificial Sun To Achieve Nuclear Fusion Energy

" China’s artificial sun is a nuclear fusion device that produces energy similar to the reactions that take place at the sun’s core. Chinese scientists plan to start operations on the device soon. If successful, scientists could achieve the ultimate goal of cheap, clean, near-limitless, nuclear fusion energy.

The device is called HL-2M Tokamak. A China National Nuclear Corporation official announced in March 2018 that the construction of HL-2M would be finished by the end of the year. HL-2M Tokamak is part of China’s Experimental Advanced Superconducting Tokamak project, which launched in 2006. In June 2019, the coil system for the HL-2M was installed, and since then, work has gone smoothly.

The sun is powered by nuclear fusion of hydrogen nuclei, which form into helium. Nuclear fusion consists of fusing two lighter atomic nuclei to form a heavier nucleus. This reaction releases a massive amount of energy. Temperatures on the sun are up to 15 million degrees Celsius.

Scientists wanted to recreate this nuclear fusion on Earth, so they heated fuel, different types of hydrogen, to temperatures over 100 million degrees Celsius. The fuel turned into an extremely hot plasma which had to be confined. One method for confining the plasma that scientists have developed is a donut-shaped device called a tokamak.

The tokamak uses magnetic fields to try to stabilize the plasma so reactions can occur and energy be released. However, plasmas are prone to producing bursts, and the device can get damaged if these touch the reactor wall.

According to James Harrison, a fusion physicist at the United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority, China’s HL-2M Tokamak differs from other devices because of its magnetic field’s flexibility. When the device is operating at high power, the scientists will be able to tailor it to protect its interior.

Magnetic confinement fusion devices—such as tokamaks—typically deposit the exhaust heat and particles from the fusion-producing core in a very narrow layer, centimeters-to-millimeters wide, which leads to very high heat and particle loads which can damage the surfaces lining the interior of the device in a reactor; the flexibility available on HL-2M will allow researchers to explore novel solutions to this problem.

The first stage of HL-2M will involve testing each part of the system individually. Then, Chinese physicists will check integrated systems before beginning any experiments.

HL-2M will provide researchers with valuable data on the compatibility of high-performance fusion plasmas with approaches to more effectively handle the heat and particles exhausted from the core of the device. This is one of the biggest issues facing the development of a commercial fusion reactor, and the results from HL-2M, as part of the international fusion research community, will influence the design of these reactors.

At the China Fusion Energy Conference in 2019, the head of the Southwestern Institute of Physics, Duan Xuru, announced that the device would become operational in 2020. He claims the artificial sun will achieve temperatures of over 200 million degrees Celsius, which is about 13 times hotter than the sun’s core."


Source Videos and More Information

https://www.intelligentliving.co/china-artificial-sun-nuclear-fusion-energy/


"China successfully activates nuclear-powered ‘artificial sun’

By Josh K. Elliott  Global News

Posted December 7, 2020 11:56 am

China has successfully activated its so-called “artificial sun,” a nuclear fusion reactor that could fuel its energy ambitions for years to come — if they can make it more sustainable.

China’s Atomic Energy Authority fired up its HL-2M Tokamak reactor for the first time on Friday, state-controlled media report. The brief test is being hailed as an important scientific achievement amid a global effort to develop safer, cleaner forms of nuclear energy.

“The development of nuclear fusion energy is not only a way to solve China’s strategic energy needs, but also has great significance for the future sustainable development of China’s energy and national economy,” the state-run People’s Daily said.

The reactor generates power by applying powerful magnetic fields to a contained loop of hot plasma, which can reach temperatures of more than 150 million C. That’s up to 10 times hotter than the core of the sun, but magnets and supercooling technology keep it contained.

The device sounds like something a supervillain might use for world domination, but China has been working alongside the International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor (ITER) project, a coalition of dozens of nuclear-powered nations. Their aim is to develop a reliable form of nuclear fusion based on the same concept.

Fusion is a coveted and elusive form of nuclear technology that scientists have been trying to perfect for decades. Fusion generates power by fusing the nuclei of atoms together, without generating large amounts of nuclear waste. That’s the opposite of fission, the atom-splitting process currently employed by nuclear weapons and power plants. Fission is easier but it generates nuclear waste, whereas fusion is hard to achieve but cleaner to maintain.

Fusion is still considered prohibitively expensive, but China’s test should help researchers in their search for ways to bring those costs down.

ITER is working on its own reactor in France, which is expected to be completed in 2025."

Source and Full Article from Dec. 2020

https://globalnews.ca/news/7505850/china-artificial-sun/