410 likes | 621 Vues
Acoustically Driven MTF By Dr. Michel Laberge General Fusion Inc. Vancouver, Canada www.generalfusion.com. MTF. Leader is Los Alamos National Lab in the US Inject 10 cm diameter FRC in aluminum tube Discharge a large capacitor bank into the tube, the magnetic field crushes the tube
E N D
Acoustically Driven MTF By Dr. Michel Laberge General Fusion Inc. Vancouver, Canada www.generalfusion.com
MTF • Leader is Los Alamos National Lab in the US • Inject 10 cm diameter FRC in aluminum tube • Discharge a large capacitor bank into the tube, the magnetic field crushes the tube • Problem for making a power plant. Tube and cable connection destroyed for each shot, neutron exposure of chamber and equipment. High cost of electrical pulse power
Linus • Linus concept address these problems • Low cost compressed gas driver • Fully surrounded with thick first wall of liquid PbLi • No hardware replacement • Too slow, ms collapsing time • Plasma confinement time required still too challenging • It is closer to normal MF
Acoustic MTF • 3 m quasi spherical vessel filled with liquid PbLi • The liquid metal is spun to open a vertical vortex • 2 spheromaks (or FRC’s) are sent from each end • They merge to produce a FRC in the center • 1500 psi steam actuated pistons accelerate to 100 m/s • Impact with vessel generates 20 kBar acoustic wave • The wave focuses to the center generating 5 Mbar • The liquid metal collapses on the D-T plasma • Plasma compressed to thermonuclear conditions • Neutrons heat the liquid metal and re-breed tritium • Heat exchanger produces steam for electricity and for the next shot at a rate of ~0.5 Hz
Advantages • Extremely low cost of pneumatic driver, ~3 M$ for 120 MJ of delivered acoustic energy • Easily achieves required repetition rate • Impact produces acoustic pulse of piston thickness/Cs for a steel piston of ~10 cm, time = 40 ms. A good match for a MTF driver • Good acoustic match between steel and PbLi 92% • Fast liner velocity of 2.6 km/s reduces the plasma requirement to achievable specifications • Solves stand-off problem, the energy is delivered through the liquid metal blanket/liner
Advantages • Solves first wall problem, 100% coverage by 1.5 m of PbLi stops most neutrons and all other radiation • Low activation and neutron damage of steel structure • Excellent tritium re-breeding ratio • Low tritium solubility in PbLi reduces tritium inventory in a 60 MWe power plant to ~1g, very safe • Solves chamber clean up time problem, no material destroyed in the reactor chamber to be evacuated • Solves price of electricity problem, no liner and transmission line replacement for each shot. Low capital cost of driver.
Advantages • Re-circulated power is steam, not electricity, reducing cost of turbo-machinery. • Relatively small power plant size of ~60 MWe reduces cost and time of development • Retains all the nice advantages of the LINUS concept but with a faster liner, reducing plasma size and lifetime requirements
ITER ICF LANL LINUS GF
Difficulties • Multiple impacts wear pistons • Hot die casting produces 100 000 parts at 300 C at 20 kBar pressure • Not quite enough, but wear is proportional to metal flow (from parts being forged) on the die • With no flow, maybe more pulses are possible • Easy change pistons if not enough impacts for full plant life
Difficulties • All pistons need to impact within ~1 ms • Unlikely to be achieved by simple mechanical timing of valve opening • Servo loop control of piston trajectory • All energy from compressed gas, but a small fraction of electrically controlled breaking under servo loop control • Modern commercial linear motion control with servo loop linear motor can control trajectory to 10 mm at speed up to 2 m/s • We need 100 mm at 100 m/s, should be doable with electromagnetic breaking (induction linear motor)
Difficulties • 1.5 m of PbLi reduces the neutron flux at the wall by 3 orders of magnitudes • No problem with neutron damage to structure for plant life • Still will activate the structure to a level above safe manual handling • Will need robotic handling for maintenance • At end of plant life, big chunk of steel will need to be stored for ~100 years before release to environment
Difficulties • Liquid PbLi will shoot at high velocity into plasma formation hardware • Hollow hardware sending plasma into a funnel with a smaller hole into reactor vessel • Exiting liquid metal goes trough and into a catching system • Super heated PbLi vapor coming out after the liquid may condensate on plasma equipment surfaces • PbLi vapor needs to be pumped out quickly
Difficulties • Pb is a very high Z element • If some gets in the plasma, that would lead to excessive radiation loses • Possible solution is to inject a layer of pure Li on the inside surface of vortex • Then need some Li Pb separation system adding complexity
Difficulties • Energy released vaporize some PbLi • Produce a outgoing shock in liquid • Will require strong, thick walled vessel to take the cycling load for plant life • On the plus side, the shock may push pistons back. No need for re-circulated power
Plasma Formation • Spheromaks require less voltage (~20 kV) and longer electrical pulse (~10 ms). Easier pulse power technology could be extended to reliable high repetition rates (solid state switch?) • Not demonstrated at 1017 cm-3. Impurities from electrodes at higher current density may be a problem. Maybe forming the spheromak at low density, accelerate and compress it to 1017 cm-3. • Spheromaks collision turns magnetic energy into ions heating just prior to compression, good.
Plasma Formation • FRC demonstrated at almost 1017 cm-3 in FRX. High voltage (~100 kV), fast discharge (~2 ms) electrical pulses are technologically harder. It may be difficult to achieve good reliability especially at high repetition rates. • FRC may require guiding magnetic field, difficult to achieve in our reactor geometry. • Less plasma heating is generated during merging. • What should we build? Your opinion please.
Small 1 D Hydro Simulation Initial pre-formed plasma • Density: 1.2 x 1017 cm-3 • Temperature: 100 eV • Diameter: 40 cm • Magnetic Field: 7 Tesla Compressed plasma • Density: 1.2 x 1020 cm-3 • Temperature: 25 keV • Diameter: 4 cm • Magnetic Field: 666 Tesla
1 D Hydro Simulation • Kinetic energy of pistons: 120 MJ • Radial compression: 9.76 • Energy transferred to plasma: 14 MJ (12%) • Fusion Yield: 704 MJ • Energy Gain: 5.9 • Maximum liner velocity: 2.6 km/s • Peak plasma pressure: 4.7 Mbar • FWHM of peak density: 6.9 ms • Substantial Alpha particles heating
Experimental Results • 30 capacitors discharge in 30 aluminum foil spirals covering the inside of a 16 cm diameter sphere • The sphere is filled with water, 40 kJ of electrical energy vaporizes the foils and sends a 22 kJ acoustic wave towards the sphere center • A 29 mm diameter, 0.75 mm thick lithium tube is mounted in the center of the sphere • A small 500 J capacitor discharges between coaxial electrodes at the base of the tube forming a z pinch in 10 torr of deuterium
Experimental Results • It forms a plasma estimated to be 3x1016 cm-3 and 7 eV • The acoustic wave compresses the tube with the plasma in it and neutrons are detected outside the sphere • The signals in the two liquid scintillators arrive at the time of maximum compression • No signal is detected in hydrogen plasma
5 ms 10 ms 0 ms t=0 ms t=5 ms t=10 ms
15 ms 20 ms 25 ms t=15 ms t=20 ms t=25 ms
30 ms 35 ms 40 ms t=30 ms t=35 ms t=40 ms
Experimental Results • Hydrogen and Deuterium shots where alternated • Signal corresponds to a small neutron yield of ~2000 neutrons/shot • Signal from two ~1 liter scintillation counters placed just outside the sphere