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by WorkLobster
1418 days ago
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> you will always need at least a small fission reactor to breed some tritium The idea for future designs is to breed Tritium in the blanket surrounding the vessel. This obviates the need for external sources. > everything close to the reactor becomes brittle in 2-4 years I'm no expert on solid state physics, but that seems a little short? JET is more than ten times as old, and as we speak it's in its second run of D-T experiments. > These are all intrinsic limitations of fusion that fission reactors just don't have To be clear these are limitations of a specific kinds of fusion reaction and/or reactor design, primarily that of Deuterium-Tritium in a solid-walled tokamak. This may be a nitpick as it's currently far and away the most promising for energy production, and the alternatives are much further from any sort of workable prototype, but I have heard of them undergoing active research: tri-alpha (aneutronic reaction, meaning no activation or embrittlement of reactor components), liquid metal for the walls and divertor (in effect, continuously replacing neutron-bombarded material), etc. |
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It is conceivable that fusion could be made to work in outer solar system spaceship propulsion, where the constraints are very different. It will never generate commercial power on Earth. The billionaires pumping cash into fusion startups are being taken for a ride. They can afford it.
By contrast, Bill Gates got US taxpayers to pony up fully half of the scratch on his pet SMR project, without giving up any ownership. So, we are the ones taken for a ride, instead.