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A sustained high-temperature fusion plasma regime facilitated by fast ions.

Authors :
Han, H.
Park, S. J.
Sung, C.
Kang, J.
Lee, Y. H.
Chung, J.
Hahm, T. S.
Kim, B.
Park, J.-K.
Bak, J. G.
Cha, M. S.
Choi, G. J.
Choi, M. J.
Gwak, J.
Hahn, S. H.
Jang, J.
Lee, K. C.
Kim, J. H.
Kim, S. K.
Kim, W. C.
Source :
Nature; Sep2022, Vol. 609 Issue 7926, p269-275, 7p
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Nuclear fusion is one of the most attractive alternatives to carbon-dependent energy sources1. Harnessing energy from nuclear fusion in a large reactor scale, however, still presents many scientific challenges despite the many years of research and steady advances in magnetic confinement approaches. State-of-the-art magnetic fusion devices cannot yet achieve a sustainable fusion performance, which requires a high temperature above 100 million kelvin and sufficient control of instabilities to ensure steady-state operation on the order of tens of seconds2,3. Here we report experiments at the Korea Superconducting Tokamak Advanced Research4 device producing a plasma fusion regime that satisfies most of the above requirements: thanks to abundant fast ions stabilizing the core plasma turbulence, we generate plasmas at a temperature of 100 million kelvin lasting up to 20 seconds without plasma edge instabilities or impurity accumulation. A low plasma density combined with a moderate input power for operation is key to establishing this regime by preserving a high fraction of fast ions. This regime is rarely subject to disruption and can be sustained reliably even without a sophisticated control, and thus represents a promising path towards commercial fusion reactors.A magnetic confinement regime established at the Korea Superconducting Tokamak Advanced Research device enables the generation of plasmas over 10<superscript>8</superscript> kelvin for 20 seconds with the aid of fast ions without plasma edge instabilities or impurity accumulation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00280836
Volume :
609
Issue :
7926
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Nature
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
158971953
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-022-05008-1