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UK scientists set new record for generating energy from nuclear fusion
Updated 21:58, 09-Feb-2022
CGTN
Inside the Joint European Torus (JET) facility near Oxford in central England. /UK Atomic Energy Authority

Inside the Joint European Torus (JET) facility near Oxford in central England. /UK Atomic Energy Authority

UK scientists announced on Wednesday that they have set a new record for generating energy from nuclear fusion, a potential future source of nearly limitless clean energy.

Nuclear fusion is the same process that the sun uses to generate heat, and proponents believe it could one day help address climate change by providing an abundant, safe and green source of energy.

A team at the Joint European Torus (JET) facility near Oxford in central England generated 59 megajoules of sustained energy during an experiment in December, more than doubling a 1997 record of 22 megajoules, the UK Atomic Energy Authority said.

The results "are the clearest demonstration worldwide of the potential for fusion energy to deliver safe and sustainable low-carbon energy," the agency said in a statement.

The donut-shaped machine used for the experiments is called a tokamak, and the JET facility is the largest operational one in the world.

Inside, a tiny amount of fuel comprising deuterium and tritium – isotopes of hydrogen – is heated to temperatures 10 times hotter than the center of the sun to create plasma.

This is held in place using superconductor electromagnets as it spins around, fuses and releases tremendous energy as heat.

Fusion is inherently safe in that it cannot start a run-away process.

Pound for pound (gram for gram) it releases nearly 4 million times more energy than burning coal, oil or gas, and creates virtually no waste.

Read more: 'Artificial sun' paves way for unlimited clean energy

'Nearly industrial scale'

The results announced Wednesday demonstrate the ability to create fusion for five seconds, but longer times will be needed for the process to become viable as a conventional power source.

"If we can maintain fusion for five seconds, we can do it for five minutes and then five hours as we scale up our operations in future machines," said Tony Donne of the EUROfusion consortium.

A larger and more advanced version of JET is currently being built in southern France, called ITER, where the Oxford data will prove vital when it comes online, possibly as soon as 2025.

About 350 scientists from EU countries (plus Switzerland, the UK and Ukraine), and more from around the globe, participate in JET experiments each year.

Meanwhile, so-called DEMO fusion power plants for supplying electricity to the grid are being developed alongside tokamak research devices.

International cooperation on fusion energy has historically been close because, unlike the nuclear fission used in the current atomic power plants, the technology cannot be weaponized.

The France-based megaproject ITER involves China, the European Union, India, Japan, South Korea, Russia and the U.S.

ITER chief Bernard Bigot hailed the JET's results as the production of energy on a "nearly industrial scale."

Despite dozens of tokamaks being built since they were first invented in Soviet Russia in the 1950s, none has yet managed to produce more energy than is put in.

British Science Minister George Freeman also hailed the "milestone results," saying "they are evidence that the ground-breaking research and innovation being done here in the UK, and via collaboration with our partners across Europe, is making fusion power a reality."

(With input from AFP)

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