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https://archief.nwo-i.nl/en/news/2016/12/01/fom-awards-2-3-million-euros-to-tame-fusion-reactor-exhaust/

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March 17th 2025
11:47:38

Fusion, the nuclear reaction powering the sun, holds great potential as a clean, safe, large scale energy source on earth. The big challenge to realizing commercially attractive fusion energy is protecting the wall of the fusion reactor against the hot exhaust of the artificial star. In a fusion reactor, individual hydrogen nuclei fuse together at high temperatures to form helium and release a great amount of energy. Magnetic fields protect the reactor wall from contact with the fusion plasma (hot, charged gas), except at the reactor's exhaust. Here, the plasma and the wall come into direct contact under conditions similar to the surface of the sun.

In the future fusion reactor ITER, the exhaust faces temperatures of tens of thousands Centigrade, an intense bombardment with fast, charged particles, and a heat of load of megawatts to a gigawatt per square meter of exhaust - comparable to a thousand welding arcs, or the exhaust of a rocket. In commercial successors to ITER, the wall will face even harsher conditions, with maintenance being time-consuming and expensive.

Research programme 'Taming the Flame'
"In a fusion power plant, even a sturdy metal wall with a high melting point will not be able to resist the plasma", says DIFFER's head of fusion research Marco de Baar. The ITER reactor wall design is capable of handling its use as an experiment, but for the fusion power plant which will be built after ITER, no suitable design yet exists. De Baar: "In our research programme, we want to already start managing the heat load inside the plasma, and bring the energy to the wall in a controlled way." The research will focus on controlling and dilute the plasma before it reaches the wall, and on the novel concept of a self-repairing exhaust wall, with a liquid metal layer flowing over and protecting the solid reactor wall.

"Taming the fusion exhaust would be very exciting for mainstream fusion research like ITER", says De Baar, "but the challenge of protecting the wall against the plasma is just as great in alternative fusion projects, ITER's challengers such as the German stellarator Wendelstein 7-X or the compact ARC-reactor proposed by MIT. We're tackling a fundamental issue here."

Practical tests
DIFFER opens up seven PhD positions and two postdoc positions in the research programme. These new researchers will work on an integrated approach of the fusion exhaust challenge together with DIFFER's existing scientific staff. A key experiment in the program is DIFFER's linear plasma generator Magnum-PSI, the only laboratory facility in the world capable of examining materials exposed to the intense plasma conditions at the walls of future fusion reactors. In addition, the team will test their research at existing fusion experiments in Germany, Switzerland and Great-Britain.

Fusion reactor ITER
The international fusion experiment ITER in southern France (start of experiments 2025) is designed to demonstrate the technical feasibility of fusion energy. Researchers from the EU, US, China, Russia, India, South-Korea and Japan are collaborating in the project. ITER is the first fusion reactor capable of producing ten times more power from fusion (500MW) than needed to sustain the plasma (50MW).

Contact information
Prof.dr. Marco de Baar, +31 40 333 49 52, head of fusion research DIFFER
Drs. Gieljan de Vries, +31 40 333 49 02, head of communications DIFFER

More information
International fusion experiment ITER
Fusion research at DIFFER
Onderzoeksprogramma Taming the Flame – available on request

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