US nuclear-fusion lab enters new era: achieving ‘ignition’ over and over

Researchers at the National Ignition Facility are consistently creating 
reactions that make more energy than they consume.

By Jeff Tollefson, 15 December 2023
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-023-04045-8


In December 2022, after more than a decade of effort and frustration, 
scientists at the US National Ignition Facility (NIF) announced that they had 
set a world record by producing a fusion reaction that released more energy 
than it consumed — a phenomenon known as ignition.

They have now proved that the feat was no accident by replicating it again and 
again, and the administration of US President Joe Biden is looking to build on 
this success by establishing a trio of US research centres to help advance the 
science.

The stadium-sized laser facility, housed at the Lawrence Livermore National 
Laboratory (LLNL) in California, has unequivocally achieved its goal of 
ignition in four out of its last six attempts, creating a reaction that 
generates pressures and temperatures greater than those that occur inside the 
Sun.

“I’m feeling pretty good,” says Richard Town, a physicist who heads the lab’s 
inertial-confinement fusion science programme at the LLNL. “I think we should 
all be proud of the achievement.”

The NIF was designed not as a power plant, but as a facility to recreate and 
study the reactions that occur during thermonuclear detonations after the 
United States halted underground weapons testing in 1992. The higher fusion 
yields are already being used to advance nuclear-weapons research, and have 
also fuelled enthusiasm about fusion as a limitless source of clean energy.

US secretary of state John Kerry called for new international partnerships to 
advance fusion energy at the COP28 climate summit in Dubai last week, and the 
US Department of Energy (DOE), which oversees the NIF, followed up by 
announcing the new research hubs, to be led by Lawrence Livermore, the 
University of Rochester in New York and Colorado State University in Fort 
Collins.

Building the NIF was “a leap of faith” for many, and its success has had a real 
impact on the fusion community, as well as on public perception, says Saskia 
Mordijck, a physicist at the College of William and Mary in Willamsburg, 
Virginia. “In that sense, what is important is that scientists said they could 
do something, and then they actually did do something.”

Hot shots

The NIF works by firing 192 laser beams at a frozen pellet of the hydrogen 
isotopes deuterium and tritium that is housed in a diamond capsule suspended 
inside a gold cylinder. The resulting implosion causes the isotopes to fuse, 
creating helium and copious quantities of energy. On 5 December 2022, those 
fusion reactions for the first time generated more energy — roughly 54% more — 
than the laser beams delivered to the target.

The facility set a new record on 30 July when its beams delivered the same 
amount of energy to the target — 2.05 megajoules — but, this time, the 
implosion generated 3.88 megajoules of fusion energy, an 89% increase over the 
input energy. Scientists at the laboratory achieved ignition during two further 
attempts in October (see ‘A year of progress’). And the laboratory’s 
calculations suggest that two others in June and September generated slightly 
more energy than the lasers provided, but not enough to confirm ignition.


For many scientists, the results confirm that the laboratory is now operating 
in a new regime: researchers can repeatedly hit a goal they’ve been chasing for 
more than a decade. Tiny variations in the laser pulses or minor defects in the 
diamond capsule can still allow energy to escape, making for an imperfect 
implosion, but the scientists now better understand the main variables at play 
and how to manipulate them.

“Even when we have these issues, we can still get more than a megajoule of 
fusion energy, which is good,” says Annie Kritcher, the NIF’s lead designer on 
this series of experiments.

New hubs

It’s a long way from there to providing fusion energy to the power grid, 
however, and the NIF, although currently home to the world’s largest laser, is 
not well-suited for that task. The facility’s laser system is enormously 
inefficient, and more than 99% of the energy that goes into a single ignition 
attempt is lost before it can reach the target.

Developing more efficient laser systems is one goal of the DOE’s new 
inertial-fusion-energy research programme. This month, the agency announced 
US$42 million over four years to establish three new research centres — each 
involving a mix of national laboratories, university researchers and industry 
partners — that will work towards this and other advances.


Nuclear-fusion lab achieves ‘ignition’: what does it mean?

This investment is the first coordinated effort to develop not just the 
technologies, but also the workforce for a future laser-fusion industry, says 
Carmen Menoni, a physicist who is heading up the hub at Colorado State 
University.

So far, most government investments in fusion-energy research have gone towards 
devices known as tokamaks, which use magnetic fields inside a doughnut-shaped 
‘torus’ to confine fusion reactions. This is the approach under development at 
ITER, an international partnership to build the world’s largest fusion facility 
near Saint-Paul-lez-Durance, France. Tokamaks have also been the focus of many 
fusion investments in the private sector, but dozens of companies are pursuing 
other approaches, such as laser fusion.

The timing for a dedicated laser-fusion programme is right, says Menoni, and 
the decision to pursue it wouldn’t have happened without the NIF’s recent 
success.

“We now know it will work,” she says. “What will take time is to develop the 
technology to a level where we can build a power plant.”

Back at the NIF, Kritcher’s latest series of experiments features a 7% boost in 
laser energy, which should, in theory, lead to even larger yields. The first 
experiment in this series was one of the successful ignitions, on 30 October.

Although it didn’t break the record, an input of 2.2 megajoules of laser energy 
yielded an output of 3.4 megajoules of fusion energy.

Kritcher chalks up the fact that it didn’t break the record for energy yield to 
growing pains with the new laser configuration, which is designed to squeeze 
more energy into the same gold cylinder.

Before moving to a larger cylinder, Kritcher says her team is going to focus on 
changes to the laser pulse that could produce a more symmetrical implosion. 
“We’ve got four experiments next year,” she says. “Let’s see.”

doi: https://doi.org/10.1038/d41586-023-04045-8


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