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https://archief.nwo-i.nl/en/news/2017/08/04/metaaldamp-beschermt-wand-van-kernfusiereactoren/

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March 22nd 2025
04:06:02

With preparations for the ITER fusion project ongoing, some researchers are looking beyond it, to the first electricity-generating fusion power plants. These DEMO reactors will mimic the fusion process between hydrogen nuclei at the heart of the stars to produce safe and practically inexhaustible energy. The wall material to handle the heat and particle bombardment at ITER's exhaust or divertor will be made out of tungsten, but even this metal will likely not be up to the more intense conditions in DEMO power plants.

Liquid metal and vapour shielding
In their Nature Communications paper, Stein van Eden and his colleagues explored the concept of a self-healing liquid metal wall for fusion power plants. This liquid - for instance tin or lithium - flows through a mesh of tungsten and continuously repairs itself from plasma damage. Especially interesting is the growing and shrinking cloud of vapour that will form above the liquid, as it can absorb heat and incoming particles from the plasma before they hit the surface and radiate energy away over a much larger surface than the original strike zone.

Van Eden's research shows that vapour shielding acts to automatically stabilise the surface temperature, even during variations in the oncoming plasma. When the surface temperature starts to rise, more liquid metal will evaporate, leading to a denser vapour cloud which absorbs and redistributes energy from the plasma. With such self-regulating and self-healing properties, liquid metal walls could have a bright future ahead of them.

Publication
Oscillatory vapour shielding of liquid metal walls in nuclear fusion devices
G.G. van Eden, V. Kvon, M.C.M. van de Sanden, T.W. Morgan
doi: 10.1038/s41467-017-00288-y (http://rdcu.be/uJCx)
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-017-00288-y

 

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