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Nuclear fusion is going to be ... 1 year away!

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It's still very far from being commercially viable. Fusion gain is a great achievement, though, with any luck commercial fusion will be achievable by 2050.

The EU is planning to complete construction of HiPER by 2020. It's supposed to offer 20 times the fusion gain of the NIF experiments at 1/10th the cost. This is still only a pilot plant, though. It will take even more research before large scale fusion is practical.

edit: bignateyk

Off the top of my head: You can get more energy from combining atoms than breaking them, the nuclear waste is short-lived (decades, instead of thousands of years for fissile waste), no nuclear proliferation concerns, abundant fuel source, etc.
 
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Even if they perfected it tomorrow, it wouldn't be ready commercially for at least 25-30 years.

And as others have said, fusion has a much higher energy density (about 17.6 MeV from ~5u products, 3.52 MeV/u) than fission (about 200 MeV from ~240u products, 0.83 MeV/u). There is also very little waste, and the fuels (Deuterium, Tritium, Helium-3) are much more abundant that uranium or other fission fuels.
 
Extremely high energy density in the fuel, less radioactive waste and no chance of catastrophic failure, to name a few benefits.

Not to mention the fuel that could be extracted from a bucket of sea water and a shovel full of soil would probably yield as much power as an entire tanker full of conventional oil based fuel.
 
Once we get this working the only thing left is the replicator, then war can pretty much end on Earth... that is unless someone else attacks from another world.

People only really fight over resource control. If everyone has abundant power and food what is there to fight over?

chicks.
 
new-years-eve-times-square-ball1.jpg
they've been using one in new york for years
 
Wow, not the standard "10 years from now" answer that we've been receiving since the 80's. an actual sustained/controlled fusion reaction may be happening THIS year!

Of course, commercial reactors are probably 10 years away 😛

I thought they had been saying 10 years since the 50's. That's when we had the first fusion bomb.
 
Even if the plasma is contained by a magnetic field, wouldn't the heat that radiates from it alone hot enough to melt just about anything up to a distance?
 
I have to ask, what are we talking about here. Fusion reactions have been demonstrated for decades, the problem is and remains, the power required to create the conditions under which fusion can occur on earth has always been greater than the extra fusion based energy generated.

And now they are claiming we can get over that hill and be able to generate more fusion energy than what is input. But if its just a tiny bit over that hill, it still won't pay for the equipment required, so to be practical, they have to get way above that hill.

And then in big country like the USA, we will need a large number of fusion generators, because line losses eat up 50% of all electricity generated. Although some sort of super electrical grid could help there.

The other question lies in the inputs. If simply hydrogen is being fused, its one thing, but if the inputs are in deuterium or tritium, that stuff is rare and expensive to come up with in large quantities likely needed.

In short, this thread seems to speculate way beyond the available information.
 
LOL silly squirrel, trix are for kids! 😉

Oh that was a rabbit.

Yeah look up...way up. That big fireball in the sky? That's fusion. 😉
 
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