Would like to see how this particular technology develops (that is if there are 
no unreported or unforeseen problems roadblocking it) The explanation made 
sense to me, but then I do not know enough about this field to have a firm 
opinion. Hope it pans out, because the world is racing towards the energy cliff 
at breakneck speed 
UW fusion reactor concept could be cheaper than coal

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| UW fusion reactor concept could be cheaper than coalFusion energy almost 
sounds too good to be true – zero greenhouse gas emissions, no long-lived 
radioactive waste, a nearly unlimited fuel supply. |
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| View on phys.org | Preview by Yahoo |
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Fusion energy almost sounds too good to be true – zero greenhouse gas 
emissions, no long-lived radioactive waste, a nearly unlimited fuel supply.
Perhaps the biggest roadblock to adopting fusion energy is that the economics 
haven't penciled out. Fusion power designs aren't cheap enough to outperform 
systems that use fossil fuels such as coal and natural gas.University of 
Washington engineers hope to change that. They have designed a concept for a 
fusion reactor that, when scaled up to the size of a large electrical power 
plant, would rival costs for a new coal-fired plant with similar electrical 
output.The team published its reactor design and cost-analysis findings last 
spring and will present results Oct. 17 at the International Atomic Energy 
Agency's Fusion Energy Conference in St. Petersburg, Russia."Right now, this 
design has the greatest potential of producing economical fusion power of any 
current concept," said Thomas Jarboe, a UW professor of aeronautics and 
astronautics and an adjunct professor in physics.The UW's reactor, called the 
dynomak, started as a class project taught by Jarboe two years ago. After the 
class ended, Jarboe and doctoral student Derek Sutherland – who previously 
worked on a reactor design at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology – 
continued to develop and refine the concept.The design builds on existing 
technology and creates a magnetic field within a closed space to hold plasma in 
place long enough for fusion to occur, allowing the hot plasma to react and 
burn. The reactor itself would be largely self-sustaining, meaning it would 
continuously heat the plasma to maintain thermonuclear conditions. Heat 
generated from the reactor would heat up a coolant that is used to spin a 
turbine and generate electricity, similar to how a typical power reactor 
works."This is a much more elegant solution because the medium in which you 
generate fusion is the medium in which you're also driving all the current 
required to confine it," Sutherland said.There are several ways to create a 
magnetic field, which is crucial to keeping a fusion reactor going. The UW's 
design is known as a spheromak, meaning it generates the majority of magnetic 
fields by driving electrical currents into the plasma itself. This reduces the 
amount of required materials and actually allows researchers to shrink the 
overall size of the reactor.Other designs, such as the experimental fusion 
reactor project that's currently being built in France – called Iter – have to 
be much larger than the UW's because they rely on superconducting coils that 
circle around the outside of the device to provide a similar magnetic field. 
When compared with the fusion reactor concept in France, the UW's is much less 
expensive – roughly one-tenth the cost of Iter – while producing five times the 
amount of energy.The UW researchers factored the cost of building a fusion 
reactor power plant using their design and compared that with building a coal 
power plant. They used a metric called "overnight capital costs," which 
includes all costs, particularly startup infrastructure fees. A fusion power 
plant producing 1 gigawatt (1 billion watts) of power would cost $2.7 billion, 
while a coal plant of the same output would cost $2.8 billion, according to 
their analysis."If we do invest in this type of fusion, we could be rewarded 
because the commercial reactor unit already looks economical," Sutherland said. 
"It's very exciting."Right now, the UW's concept is about one-tenth the size 
and power output of a final product, which is still years away. The researchers 
have successfully tested the prototype's ability to sustain a plasma 
efficiently, and as they further develop and expand the size of the device they 
can ramp up to higher-temperature plasma and get significant fusion power 
output.The team has filed patents on the reactor concept with the UW's Center 
for Commercialization and plans to continue developing and scaling up its 
prototypes.

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