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by scythe
1281 days ago
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From the PDF (page 15): https://suli.pppl.gov/2018/course/Ma.pdf typical confinement time for ICF is on the order of a tenth of a nanosecond. I don't expect they have made a factor-of-millions improvement on this. I generally avoid watching videos whenever possible, but I think you are referring to the frequency at which the fuel pellets can be repeatedly ignited by a laser — there are no plans to use the output of one fuel pellet to directly ignite the next. In fact not even the "magneto-inertial" techniques with putative confinement times in the microseconds have a roadmap to achieve this. |
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It isn't a nuclear fission reaction where it is a chain reaction between pellets. Each pellet interaction produces energy, and you capture that energy. It is ignition for the pellet, not other pellets in the machine. The boiling of water thankfully happens on a much longer timescale, being accumulationf of energy of many pellets over a few cycles.