Introduction To Fusion: Advantages of Fusion Power
Introduction To Fusion: Advantages of Fusion Power
Nuclear fusion is one of the most promising options for generating large amounts of carbon-free
energy in the future.
Fusion is the process that heats the
Sun and all other stars, where atomic
nuclei collide together and release
energy (in the form of neutrons, see
diagram on the right). Fusion
scientists and engineers are
developing the technology to use this
process in tomorrow's power stations.
To get energy from fusion, gas from a
combination of types of hydrogen –
deuterium and tritium – is heated to
very high temperatures (100 million degrees Celsius). One way to achieve these conditions is a
method called ‘magnetic confinement' – controlling the hot gas (known as a plasma) with strong
magnets. The most promising device for this is the ‘tokamak', a Russian word for a ring-shaped
magnetic chamber.
See also: How fusion works
Advantages of fusion power
The world needs new, cleaner ways to supply our increasing energy demand, as concerns grow over
climate change and declining supplies of fossil fuels. Power stations using fusion would have a
number of advantages:
No carbon emissions. The only by-products of fusion reactions are small amounts of helium, which is
an inert gas that will not add to atmospheric pollution.
Abundant fuels. Deuterium can be extracted from water and tritium is produced from lithium, which is
found in the earth's crust. Fuel supplies will therefore last for millions of years.
Energy efficiency. One kilogram of fusion fuel can provide the same amount of energy as 10 million
kilograms of fossil fuel.
No long-lived radioactive waste. Only plant components become radioactive and these will be safe to
recycle or dispose of conventionally within 100 years.
Safety. The small amounts of fuel used in fusion devices (about the weight of a postage stamp at any
one time) means that a large-scale nuclear accident is not possible.
Reliable power. Fusion power plants should provide a baseload supply of large amounts of electricity,
at costs that are estimated to be broadly similar to other energy sources.