China’s Artificial Sun Breaks Its Own Record To Maintain ‘Highly Confined, 
Extremely Hot’ Plasma For 403 Seconds

By Sakshi Tiwari  April 14, 2023 
https://eurasiantimes.com/chinas-artificial-sun-breaks-its-own-record-to-maintain/


China’s “artificial sun” broke records as it generated extremely hot plasma for 
seven minutes on the night of April 12.

The artificial sun project is based on nuclear fusion, giving China an 
unlimited energy source without generating residual waste.

Nuclear fusion is based on the idea that energy can be released by forcing 
atomic nuclei together rather than separating them, as in the fission reactions 
that powers the existing nuclear power plants.

In a breakthrough, the Experimental Advanced Superconducting Tokamak (EAST) in 
the eastern Chinese city of Hefei produced and maintained plasma for 403 
seconds, beating its own previous record of 101 seconds set in 2017, CGTN 
reported.

The report noted that the quantum leap was achieved after more than 120,000 
runs. The recent achievement represents another significant step towards 
developing highly effective, reasonably priced thermonuclear fusion reactors.

Moreover, it is expected to serve as a crucial experimental foundation for the 
International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor’s operation and China’s 
independent development and operation of fusion reactors.

The ultimate objective of EAST, based at the Institute of Plasma Physics under 
the Chinese Academy of Sciences (ASIPP) in Hefei, is to produce nuclear fusion 
similar to that of the Sun using materials abundant in the sea to offer a 
continual stream of clean energy.

In an exclusive interview with Xinhua, ASIPP director Song Yuntao stated that 
the main significance of this breakthrough lies in the high confinement mode. 
He claimed that high confinement plasma operation significantly boosted 
particle temperature and density, laying the groundwork for future fusion power 
plants to generate more electricity cheaply and efficiently.

According to Yuntao, the effort established a strong foundation for enhancing 
the technological and financial viability of fusion reactors.

In January 2022, the country set another record when it superheated a loop of 
plasma to temperatures five times hotter than the sun for more than 17 minutes. 
At the time, the EAST nuclear fusion reactor sustained a temperature of 158 
million degrees Fahrenheit (70 million degrees Celsius) for 1,056 seconds.

In January this year, the Hefei Institutes of Physical Science, Chinese Academy 
of Sciences (CAS) announced that a breakthrough demonstration of a new plasma 
operation scenario called Super I-Mode was made on the Experimental Advanced 
Superconducting Tokamak (EAST).

By using magnetic fields to heat a plasma-charged gas made up of free-moving 
electrons and hydrogen ions to a temperature of 70 million degrees Celsius, the 
record-breaking run was able to hold high energy both at the plasma edge and 
further inside the plasma.

The “artificial sun” uses raw elements virtually limitless on Earth, unlike 
fossil fuels like coal, oil, and natural gas, which are in short supply and 
have significant adverse environmental effects. Fusion energy is regarded as 
the “ultimate energy” for the future of humanity because it is safer and 
cleaner.

[img:]   The tokamak, the most popular type of fusion reactor, operates by 
heating plasma to a very high temperature (one of the four states of matter, 
composed of positive ions and negatively charged free electrons), then 
confining it inside a reactor chamber with strong magnetic fields. [File:] 
Artificial-sun-china-temperature-record-1200x630.jpg - Wikimedia Commons  File 
Image: China’s Artificial Sun  [/img]

While the scientists are working on it, how to handle plasma hot enough to fuse 
has proven to be one of the major roadblocks. Since they are supposed to 
function at considerably lower pressures than where fusion naturally occurs 
inside the cores of stars, fusion reactors have to run at extremely high 
temperatures – several times hotter than the sun.

The technically difficult element is finding a technique to confine the plasma 
to prevent it from burning through the reactor walls (with lasers or magnetic 
fields) without destroying the fusion process. Cooking the plasma to 
temperatures higher than the sun is comparatively simple.

According to a Chinese state media report, one of the most promising routes to 
controlled nuclear fusion is EAST, which started running in 2006. It conducted 
more than 120,000 experiments to reach the latest milestone. Since it began 
operating, the EAST has served as a free testing ground for Chinese and foreign 
scientists to conduct fusion-related experiments and research.

China is also a member of the world’s largest fusion reactor, dubbed the 
International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor, which is currently under 
development in France.

Aimed at building the world’s first fusion demonstration reactor, China has 
completed the engineering design of the future China Fusion Engineering Test 
Reactor (CFETR), which is seen as a next-generation artificial sun.

Once completed around 2035, CFETR will produce massive heat with a peak power 
output of up to two gigawatts.

Contact the author at [email protected]

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