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"It's a pivotal development for the UK's plan to put a fusion power plant on the grid by the early 2040s - and for bringing low-carbon energy from fusion to the world."
Problem is that the fusion of hydrogen has efficiency problems relating to the Columb threshold I believe, more power in than out.
. I think the crux of it is the sun is a huge gravitational body that somehow violates the conservation of energy when viewed from our understanding.
We will not achieve fusion until we master gravity.
It does not take much energy to put something into orbit, but for some inexplicable reason we cannot achieve that either.
Unfortunately, I don't believe we have an easily accessible source of heavy hydrogen isotopes outside of nuclear reactors.
Quote from: CliffordK on 26/05/2021 19:24:26Unfortunately, I don't believe we have an easily accessible source of heavy hydrogen isotopes outside of nuclear reactors.I believe they did that calculation a long time ago, and while separating heavy hydrogen is not trivial, it is viable.Otherwise, they wouldn't have bothered.
(Tritium) is easier to fuse ....If you have a working D+D fusion reactor then you have an abundant source of neutrons to produce T if you really want it
At present, we don't have any working controlled fusion reactor.
This story of Norsk Hydro at Rjukan is worth a read for anyone interested in zero-carbon electricity, deuterium, cross-country skiing, glider assault, and high adventure that seriously impacted the Second World War. https://weaponsandwarfare.com/2016/04/16/norwegian-heavy-water-raids
Making sustained fusion work is reasonably easy, school children have done it before. Making fusion work where more excess energy comes out than goes in is a bit harder, but has been done. Making fusion work where the excess energy coming out is sufficient and of a form suitable for running the reaction is harder still. To make fusion work as a practical power source, you have to be able to do all that, as well as being able to run the reaction continuously, it must produce enough energy to pay for the construction and operation, and that's even harder.