Page added on May 21, 2016
Tri Alpha Energy, a Southern California fusion startup, just raised nearly $500,000 to try to make fusion power a reality. Funded by heavyweights like Goldman Sachs and Paul Allen, the company thinks it might have a prototype reactor ready at some point in the 2020s.
Fusion is as elusive as it is expensive. CERNs Large Hadron Collider is famous for its work as a high-energy particle accelerator, but fusion as a practical, commercially viable form of energy it still tantalizingly out of reach. Magnetic confinement fusion is advancing but still beyond us. Cold fusion is regarded as a bogeyman and a joke by the majority of the scientific community, though it maintains a faithful core of supporters.
An ambitious class of startups, though, is attempting various lower-budget reactor designs in an effort to make fusion — and with it, the potential for limitless clean energy — a reality. And an affordable one, at that.
As the MIT Technology Review reported in its sneak peak of the company, Tri Alpha Energy already claims to have kept high-energy plasma stable in its locomotive-size” generator for a full 11.5 milliseconds, which relatively speaking is a long time.
Founded in 2002, this Vancouver-based startup says it’s planning a full-scale net gain prototype system that emphasizes low cost and practical results. “The prototype will be designed for single pulse testing, demonstrating full net energy gain on each pulse, a world first.” It’s not clear exactly when that will happen, but the company seems to be on a similar track to Tri Alpha, expecting results of some sort within a decade. General Fusion is a major player in the race for cheap (relatively, anyway) fusion; it has 10 major investors, including Bezos Expeditions (yes, that Bezos. Dude has his hand in literally everything).
Helion is based in Redmond, Washington and is doing its thing with $5 million from the Department of Energy. It also lists Mithril and Capricorn Investment Group as partners. It’s pursuing magneto-interial fusion, and claims that by “combining the stability of steady magnetic fusion and the heating of pulsed inertial fusion, a commercially practical system has been realized that is smaller and lower cost than existing programs.” The company says it plans to market its designs commercially viable by 2022.
Okay, “startup” doesn’t really do justice to the massive, international collaborative research project that is ITER. This is here for context. The project is French, but it’s supported by literally dozens of countries, including the United States. They’re collaborating to build the largest-ever tokomak, or magnetic fusion device. ITER claims it will be the first to produce net energy and maintain fusion for an extended period of time.
Originally pitched as a (again, relatively) somewhat quick and cheap route, ITER’s own timeline has already been pushed back (as is common for all things fusion-related) by at least six years, and the budget hiked from around $6 billion to nearly $20 billion. You now see why fusion startups are a thing.
11 Comments on "The Search Is On for (Cheap) Nuclear Fusion"
onlooker on Sat, 21st May 2016 12:39 pm
The only nuclear fusion Humans will ever have it seems will be from the Sun.
dave thompson on Sat, 21st May 2016 1:01 pm
I was into TED talks once for a while. They all seem to have a recurring theme of humans and\with technology overcoming all of life’s perceived ills. What a racket.
tagio on Sat, 21st May 2016 2:17 pm
Wow, we’ve only been looking for ways to have cheap and safe fusion for like, what, 40+ years? I am sure we are on the cusp of some new amazing breakthrough.
My bet is that this is some new marketing scam and troll for $$$$$, like Tesla.
green_achers on Sat, 21st May 2016 5:03 pm
If I had retirement funds in any of the “heavyweights” listed there, I’d be looking to move into something a little more substantial, like maybe Dixie Cups.
Sissyfuss on Sat, 21st May 2016 7:23 pm
Fusion will always be ten years away, unlike extinction.
makati1 on Sat, 21st May 2016 8:24 pm
“The Search Is On for (Cheap) Nuclear Fusion”
And Unicorns, the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow, a perpetual motion machine, etc.
mo on Sat, 21st May 2016 9:35 pm
I like Mr fusion on back to the future
Go Speed Racer on Sat, 21st May 2016 10:57 pm
… and that one could do Fusion of coffee grounds and banana peels. :O)
B_rad on Sun, 22nd May 2016 1:21 pm
Research and develop fine.
We really do have a fusion rector
already being used.
And is at the root of all energy we already use including the food we eat.
Westexasfanclub on Mon, 23rd May 2016 4:21 am
Give the small startups a chance. The real money-sinkhole is ITER. Real invention always came out of a garage. I you succeed there you can scale the technology to any kind of Alamos-style monster (just remember the first ever fission experiment: a wooden table with some gear).
Vortexengineer on Mon, 23rd May 2016 8:26 pm
Another project is being run by First Light Fusion in Oxford UK. Their advisory board is a who’s who of advanced energy, particularly fusion.
See also http://www.vortexengineer.com