Berliner Boersenzeitung - In a doughnut in Japan, unlocking the power of the Sun

EUR -
AED 4.108467
AFN 76.126029
ALL 98.859028
AMD 430.389097
ANG 2.004188
AOA 1047.532576
ARS 1079.667899
AUD 1.62569
AWG 2.013412
AZN 1.90435
BAM 1.954388
BBD 2.245288
BDT 132.884008
BGN 1.954464
BHD 0.421452
BIF 3225.028889
BMD 1.118562
BND 1.433135
BOB 7.68438
BRL 6.095942
BSD 1.112002
BTN 93.030997
BWP 14.612836
BYN 3.639269
BYR 21923.814744
BZD 2.241541
CAD 1.502391
CDF 3205.237105
CHF 0.94712
CLF 0.037041
CLP 1022.063959
CNY 7.853198
CNH 7.850801
COP 4640.634001
CRC 577.293299
CUC 1.118562
CUP 29.641892
CVE 110.185405
CZK 25.106179
DJF 198.017842
DKK 7.457386
DOP 66.872888
DZD 147.854583
EGP 54.482357
ERN 16.77843
ETB 132.732091
FJD 2.447134
FKP 0.851851
GBP 0.835918
GEL 3.048118
GGP 0.851851
GHS 17.514192
GIP 0.851851
GMD 76.622706
GNF 9607.145909
GTQ 8.595791
GYD 232.649859
HKD 8.710511
HNL 27.619542
HRK 7.605115
HTG 146.957783
HUF 395.118628
IDR 16888.999502
ILS 4.203069
IMP 0.851851
INR 93.535498
IQD 1456.786722
IRR 47083.071393
ISK 151.129016
JEP 0.851851
JMD 175.487938
JOD 0.792611
JPY 161.182584
KES 143.164488
KGS 94.207749
KHR 4519.038554
KMF 494.348658
KPW 1006.705145
KRW 1488.360296
KWD 0.341318
KYD 0.926755
KZT 533.329039
LAK 24512.949853
LBP 99583.134284
LKR 336.945635
LRD 222.401331
LSL 19.2654
LTL 3.302823
LVL 0.676607
LYD 5.276212
MAD 10.77552
MDL 19.410499
MGA 5026.503782
MKD 61.537584
MMK 3633.045668
MNT 3800.873547
MOP 8.917797
MRU 43.990615
MUR 51.151943
MVR 17.181472
MWK 1928.258787
MXN 21.649985
MYR 4.628054
MZN 71.419949
NAD 19.2654
NGN 1828.47179
NIO 40.92172
NOK 11.660858
NPR 148.852134
NZD 1.771096
OMR 0.430603
PAB 1.111997
PEN 4.195869
PGK 4.353913
PHP 62.522583
PKR 308.917526
PLN 4.263604
PYG 8654.78667
QAR 4.053272
RON 4.976225
RSD 117.088812
RUB 103.660387
RWF 1500.942591
SAR 4.197069
SBD 9.294949
SCR 13.384639
SDG 672.814621
SEK 11.317906
SGD 1.436748
SHP 0.851851
SLE 25.556124
SLL 23455.679619
SOS 635.552256
SRD 33.835385
STD 23151.97455
SVC 9.730232
SYP 2810.420452
SZL 19.271165
THB 36.574184
TJS 11.820661
TMT 3.914967
TND 3.369866
TOP 2.619786
TRY 38.198153
TTD 7.566737
TWD 35.646891
TZS 3054.793179
UAH 45.946142
UGX 4113.991369
USD 1.118562
UYU 46.366506
UZS 14174.760481
VEF 4052049.523699
VES 41.123347
VND 27511.031817
VUV 132.797925
WST 3.129136
XAF 655.495206
XAG 0.035127
XAU 0.000421
XCD 3.022969
XDR 0.822628
XOF 655.486422
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.976399
ZAR 19.244887
ZMK 10068.405188
ZMW 29.496484
ZWL 360.1765
  • JRI

    0.1200

    13.42

    +0.89%

  • NGG

    -0.3700

    70.11

    -0.53%

  • RBGPF

    -0.6200

    59.48

    -1.04%

  • CMSC

    0.0299

    25.1

    +0.12%

  • SCS

    0.1100

    13.12

    +0.84%

  • BCC

    0.1300

    141.78

    +0.09%

  • BTI

    0.2000

    38.1

    +0.52%

  • GSK

    0.1200

    40.98

    +0.29%

  • AZN

    -0.2700

    76.87

    -0.35%

  • RIO

    2.8400

    67.42

    +4.21%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0300

    7.04

    -0.43%

  • RELX

    -0.3300

    48.53

    -0.68%

  • CMSD

    0.1150

    25.12

    +0.46%

  • VOD

    -0.0200

    10.09

    -0.2%

  • BCE

    0.0300

    35.13

    +0.09%

  • BP

    -0.0300

    32.83

    -0.09%

In a doughnut in Japan, unlocking the power of the Sun
In a doughnut in Japan, unlocking the power of the Sun / Photo: Philip FONG - AFP

In a doughnut in Japan, unlocking the power of the Sun

With its tangle of pipes and pumps leading to a metal pot the size of a five-storey building, Japan's JT-60SA machine looks to the untrained eye like a contraption from 1970s sci-fi.

Text size:

But inside it is a doughnut-shaped vessel where experiments done at millions of degrees could help unlock a carbon-free, inexhaustible and safe power source for the future: nuclear fusion.

"Fusion energy, the power behind the Sun and the stars, has been a great prize for energy research for decades, ever since it was first attempted in the 1950s and 60s to find some way to reproduce this power of the Sun here on Earth," project leader Sam Davis told AFP on a recent tour.

"Not only is (fusion) free from greenhouse gases and free from long-lived nuclear waste, but it's compact, doesn't cover the whole landscape, and can generate industrially useful quantities of power," the British-German engineer said.

Unlike fission, the technique currently used in nuclear power plants, fusion involves combining two atomic nuclei instead of splitting one, generating vast amounts of energy.

The process is safe and there are no nasty by-products like fissile material for a nuclear weapon or hazardous radioactive waste that takes thousands of years to degrade, its proponents say.

- Swirling plasma -

Taking 15 years to build in Naka, northeast of Tokyo, the JT-60SA is 15.5 metres (51 feet) tall and 13.7 metres (45 feet) wide, comprising a so-called tokamak vessel able to contain swirling plasma heated to millions of degrees.

Inside the facility, which was inaugurated in December, the aim is to get nuclei of hydrogen isotopes to fuse into an atom of helium, releasing energy, and mimicking the process that takes place inside the Sun and stars.

"With only one gram (0.04 ounces) of a mixed fuel... we can obtain an energy equivalent to eight tonnes of oil," said Takahiro Suzuki, deputy project manager for the Japan side of the joint project with the European Union.

But despite decades of efforts, the technology remains in its infancy and is very expensive.

Currently the largest such facility in operation, the JT-60SA is the little brother and guinea pig of the International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor (ITER) being built in France.

According to media reports, ITER -- a project run by six countries and the European Union -- is years behind schedule and could end up costing as much as 40 billion euros ($42.3 billion), far more than first projected.

The holy grail of both projects, as well as others around the world, is to develop technology that releases more energy than is needed to fuel it -- and at a large scale and for a sustained period.

The feat of "net energy gain" was managed in December 2022 at the National Ignition Facility at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in the United States, home to the world's largest laser.

- 'Flash in a can' -

But the US facility uses a different method from ITER and the JT-60SA known as inertial confinement fusion, in which high-energy lasers are directed simultaneously into a thimble-sized cylinder containing hydrogen.

"Magnetic confinement, and in particular, tokamaks, of the kind that JT-60SA is, are much more applicable to running a steady state power plant, to steady energy production as we would need," Davis said.

"This is not just a flash in a can."

But with the world record set by China for heating plasma to the required temperature -- 120 million degrees Celsius (216 million degrees Fahrenheit) -- currently just 101 seconds, there is still a long path ahead.

"Nuclear fusion can certainly contribute to a future energy mix. Exactly on what timescale is very hard to say. It will come down ultimately to how much is invested in the field (and) how much society wants to pursue this as a solution," Davis said.

(G.Gruner--BBZ)