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by deepspace
489 days ago
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So, deuterium needs to be obtained from sea water through distillation and electrolysis - both energy intensive operations. And tritium comes from nuclear reactors. I have always wondered - assuming that the confinement problem is solved, how does the cost of the fuel compare to fission (or other generation methods? |
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Nuclear fusion breeds its own tritium from lithium.
Running a 1 GW thermal fusion reactor for a year would consume $483,000 of deuterium and $1300 of lithium. At 40% conversion efficiency and 5 cents per kwh, the fusion reactor would produce $175 million of electricity in that same year.
For comparison, fuel is about 5% of the cost of electricity from fission, and about 50% the cost from coal.