Plasma physics: The fusion upstarts
Fuelled by venture capital and a lot of hope, alternative fusion technologies are heating up.
 
  
Hubert Kang Photography
General Fusion's reactor would use massive pistons to crush fuel in a spinning vortex of liquid lead.
 
 
To reach one of the world's most secretive 
nuclear-fusion companies, visitors must wind their way through a 
suburban office park at the foot of the Santa Ana Mountains, just east 
of Irvine, California, until they pull up outside the large but unmarked
 headquarters of Tri Alpha Energy.
This is as close as any outsider can get 
without signing a non-disclosure agreement; Tri Alpha protects its trade
 secrets so tightly that it does not even have a website. But the 
fragments of information that have filtered out make it clear that the 
building houses one of the largest fusion experiments now operating in 
the United States. It is also one of the most unconventional. Instead of
 using the doughnut-shaped 'tokamak' reactor that has dominated 
fusion-energy research for more than 40 years, Tri Alpha is testing a 
linear reactor that it claims will be smaller, simpler and cheaper — and
 will lead to commercial fusion power in little more than a decade, far 
ahead of the 30 to 50 years often quoted for tokamaks.
That
 sounds particularly appealing at a time when the world's leading fusion
 project, a giant tokamak named ITER, is mired in delays and cost 
overruns. The facility, being built in Cadarache, France, is expected to
 be the first fusion reactor capable of generating an excess of energy 
from a sustained burn of its plasma fuel. But it looks set to cost as 
much as US$50 billion — about 10 times the original estimate — and will 
not begin its
first fuelled experiments before 2027, 11 years behind 
schedule.
LISTEN
 Mitch Waldrop pits the fusion upstarts against the establishment projects. Can the smaller schemes deliver?
 
With ITER consuming the lion's share 
of the US fusion-energy budget, fans of alternative approaches have 
scant government support. But growing impatience with the tokamak 
technology has spurred the Tri Alpha team and many other physicists in 
the United States and Canada to pursue different options. Over the past 
decade and a half, these mavericks have launched at least half a dozen 
companies to pursue alternative designs for fusion reactors. Some are 
reporting encouraging results, not to mention attracting sizeable 
investments. Tri Alpha itself has raised $150 million from the likes of 
Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen and the Russian government's 
venture-capital firm, Rusnano.
But that 
success is bringing increased scrutiny of their bold promises. Tri Alpha
 “has got very tough problems to overcome as it starts scaling up to 
reactor size”, says Jeffrey Freidberg, a nuclear physicist at the 
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in Cambridge. For example, 
the company must prove that it can achieve the billion-kelvin 
temperatures needed to burn the exotic fuel it wants to use, and must 
demonstrate a practical way to convert the energy output into 
electricity. Similar questions could be raised about any of the other 
upstarts, says Stephen Dean, who heads Fusion Power Associates, an 
advocacy group in Gaithersburg, Maryland. “I don't think you can 
honestly say that any of these things are at the stage where fusion can 
be demonstrated quickly,” he says.
Will 
alternative fusion companies be able to sustain their momentum and 
justify their founders' optimism? Or
will they fizzle like so many 
fusion dreams before them?
Follow the Sun
In
 principle, building a fusion reactor is just a matter of imitating the 
Sun. Take the appropriate isotopes of hydrogen or other light elements, 
add heat to strip the electrons from the nuclei and form an ionized 
plasma, then compress that plasma and hold it together for a while, 
allowing the nuclei to fuse and convert a portion of their mass into 
energy. But in practice, trying to mimic a star leads to horrendous 
engineering problems: for example, hot plasma trapped in a magnetic 
field tends to twist and turn like an enraged snake struggling to 
escape.
Fusion researchers have long favoured 
tokamaks as the best way to contain this plasma beast. Developed by 
Soviet physicists in the 1950s and announced to the West a decade later,
 the reactors achieved plasma densities, temperatures and confinement 
times much higher than any machine before them. And as physicists 
refined the design, they improved the way that tokamaks controlled 
high-energy plasma.
But from the beginning, many physicists 
have wondered whether tokamaks could ever be scaled up to achieve 
commercial power output. They are dauntingly complex, for starters. The 
toroidal chamber has to be wound with multiple sets of electromagnetic 
coils to shape the magnetic field that confines the plasma. And more 
coils run through the doughnut hole to drive a powerful electric current
 through the plasma.
Then
 there is the fuel, a mixture of the hydrogen isotopes deuterium (D) and
 tritium (T). D–T is widely regarded as the only sane choice for a power
 reactor because it ignites at a lower temperature than any other 
combination — only about 100 million kelvin — and releases much more 
energy. But 80% of that energy emerges from the reaction in the form of 
speeding neutrons, which would wreak havoc on the walls of a power 
reactor, leaving them highly radioactive. To generate electricity, the 
neutrons' energy would have to be used to heat water in a conventional 
steam turbine — a process that is only 30–40% efficient.
Cost,
 complexity and slow progress have also dogged inertial-confinement 
fusion, the most prominent alternative to the tokamaks' magnetic 
confinement. This approach, in which frozen fuel pellets are imploded by
 high-powered laser beams, has also received a lot of government 
funding. But despite decades of effort on inertial confinement, 
initiatives such as the National Ignition Facility at Lawrence Livermore
 National Laboratory in Livermore, California, are still struggling to 
deliver on their fusion-power promises (see
 Ignition Switch).
Radical departure
Such
 concerns have sparked some enthusiasm for the stellarator: a toroidal 
device that simplifies certain aspects of the tokamak but requires even 
more complex magnets. But most mainstream plasma physicists have simply 
left the practical engineering issues for later, assuming that fixes 
will emerge after the plasma physics has been worked out. The fusion 
mavericks are among the minority who argue that a more radical solution 
is needed: first get the engineering right, by designing a simple, cheap
 reactor that power companies might actually want to buy, and then try 
to make the plasmas behave.
One of those 
upstarts is Norman Rostoker, a physicist at the University of 
California, Irvine, who co-founded Tri Alpha in 1998 at the age of 72. 
He and his colleagues proposed ditching D–T fuel in favour of fusing 
protons with boron-11, a stable isotope that comprises about 80% of 
natural boron. Igniting this p–
11B fuel would require 
temperatures of about a billion kelvin, almost 100 times as hot as the 
core of the Sun. And the energy created in each fusion event would be 
only about half that released by D–T. But the reaction products would be
 practically free of troublesome neutrons: the fusion would generate 
just three energetic helium nuclei, also known as α-particles. These are
 charged, so they could be guided by magnetic fields into an 'inverse 
cyclotron' device that would convert their energy into an ordinary 
electric current with around 90% efficiency.
Burning a billion-kelvin p–
11B
 plasma in a tokamak was out of the question, not least because 
unfeasibly large magnetic fields would be needed to confine it. So 
Rostoker and his colleagues designed a linear reactor that looks like 
two cannons pointed barrel to barrel. Each cannon would fire rings of 
plasma called plasmoids that are known to be remarkably stable: the flow
 of ions in the plasma would generate a magnetic field, which in turn 
would keep the plasma confined. “It's the most ideal configuration you 
could imagine,” says Alan Hoffman, a plasma physicist at the University 
of Washington in Seattle.
To start the 
reactor, each cannon would fire a plasmoid into a central chamber, where
 the two would merge into a larger, free-floating plasmoid that would 
survive for as long as it could be fed with additional fuel. The 
α-particles emerging from the reaction would be guided back through the 
cannons by another magnetic field, and captured in the energy converter. 
“Will fusion companies be able to sustain their momentum — or will they fizzle?”
 
 
By the time the team published this concept
 in 1997, it was becoming clear that the US energy department was not 
going to fund development of the machine, preferring instead to focus on
 tokamaks, which seemed to be a safer bet. “The big experiments have 
been funded for decades, so there's little chance they won't meet their 
milestones,” says John Slough, a plasma physicist at the University of 
Washington. “If they start funding these alternatives, all the 
uncertainties come back.”
So Rostoker and his 
colleagues decided to take advantage of the United States' robust 
culture of high-tech startups and venture-capital funding. They formed a
 company, naming it Tri Alpha after the output of the p–
11B reaction, and went on to raise enough investment to employ more than 100 people.
Dean
 suspects that the start-up mindset may explain why Tri Alpha is so 
secretive. “It's part of the mystique of being a venture-capital-funded 
company: develop your ideas before anyone else can see them,” he says. 
But over the past five years or so, the company has started to let its 
employees publish results and present at conferences. With its current 
test machine, a 10-metre device called the C-2, Tri Alpha has shown that
 the colliding plasmoids merge as expected
,
 and that the fireball can sustain itself for up to 4 milliseconds — 
impressively long by plasma-physics standards — as long as fuel beams 
are being injected
.
 Last year, Tri Alpha researcher Houyang Guo announced at a plasma 
conference in Fort Worth, Texas, that the burn duration had increased to
 5 milliseconds. The company is now looking for cash to build a larger 
machine.
“As a science programme, it's been 
highly successful,” says Hoffman, who reviewed the work for Allen when 
the billionaire was deciding whether to invest. “But it's not p–
11B.”
 So far, he says, Tri Alpha has run its C-2 only with deuterium, and it 
is a long way from achieving the extreme plasma conditions needed to 
burn its ultimate fuel.
Nor has Tri Alpha 
demonstrated direct conversion of α-particles to electricity. “I haven't
 seen any schemes that would actually work in practice,” says Martin 
Greenwald, an MIT physicist and former chair of the energy department's 
fusion-energy advisory committee. Indeed, Tri Alpha is planning that its
 first-generation power reactor would use a more conventional 
steam-turbine system. Other fusion entrepreneurs will have to tackle 
similar challenges, but that has not deterred them. Slough is chief 
scientific officer at Helion Energy in Redmond, Washington, which is 
developing a linear colliding-beam reactor that would be small enough to
 be carried on the back of a large truck. The Helion reactor will fire a
 steady stream of plasmoids from each side into a chamber, where the 
fuel is crushed by magnetic fields until fusion begins. Within one 
second, the fusion products are channelled away just as the next pair of
 plasmoids hurtles in. “The analogy we like to make is to a diesel 
engine,” says the company's chief executive, David Kirtley. “On each 
stroke you inject the fuel, compress it with the piston it until it 
ignites without needing a spark, and the explosion pushes back on the 
piston.”
Helion has demonstrated the concept
 in a D–D reactor with plasmoids that fire once every three minutes, and
 it is now seeking $15 million in private financing over the next five 
years to develop a full-scale machine that could use D–T fuel to reach 
the break-even point, when it generates as much energy as it takes to 
run. The company hopes that its reactor could eventually reach the 
hotter conditions needed to fuse deuterium with helium-3, another 
combination that produces only α-particles and protons, with no neutron 
by-products.
Kirtley is optimistic about the 
money. “There is a giant market need for low-cost, safe, clean power,” 
he says. “So we're seeing a big push in the private investment community
 to fund alternative ways to generate it.” And if the fund-raising is 
successful, says Kirtley, “our plan is to have our pilot power plant 
come online in six years.”
In a spin
Other
 alternative concepts stick with D–T fuel, but confine it in different 
ways. In Burnaby, Canada, researchers at General Fusion have designed a 
reactor in which a plasmoid of D–T will be injected into a spinning 
vortex of liquid lead, which will then be crushed inwards by a forest of
 pistons. If this compression happens within a few microseconds, the 
plasma will implode to create fusion condition
.
 One advantage of this design is that the liquid lead does not degrade 
when it gets blasted by neutrons, says Michel Laberge, who founded 
General Fusion in 2002.
General Fusion has 
demonstrated the idea with a small-scale device, using pistons driven by
 explosives, and has raised about $50 million from venture capitalists 
and the Canadian government. If the company can win another $25 million 
or so, Laberge says, it will build a beefier implosion system that can 
compress the plasma to the levels needed for fusion — perhaps within the
 next two years.
Despite such optimism, Dean 
estimates that it will be at least a decade, maybe a lot longer, before 
any alternative fusion company produces a working power plant. There is 
simply too much new technology to be demonstrated, he says. “I think 
these things are well motivated, and should be supported — but I don't 
think we're on the verge of a breakthrough.”
It
 is not clear how much of that support will come from the US energy 
department in the foreseeable future. The department's fusion-energy 
programme has provided a modicum of cash for Helion, as well as for some
 small-scale academic work on alternative reactors. And its long-shot 
funding agency, the Advanced Research Projects Agency—Energy, has 
expressed interest in some of the alterative concepts, to the extent of 
holding a workshop on them last year. The fusion-energy advisory 
committee is preparing a ten-year research plan, due by the start of 
next year, that could conceivably lead to more backing for the upstarts.
 But funds are tight, and ITER continues to be a huge financial drain.
For
 now, the big money will probably have to come from the private sector. 
And despite the many technical hurdles, investors seem willing to take a
 chance.
“People are starting to think, 'Hey, 
maybe there are other ways of doing this!'” says Slough. “Maybe it's 
worth a few million to find out.”