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With the semi-prototype of the Blanket First Wall completed earlier this year, F4E is moving full-speed ahead and has just completed the signing of the contracts related to the manufacturing of the first full-scale prototypes. As this is a technically-challenging project which requires hitherto unknown technology and in order to mitigate risks and maintain competition until the series production, F4E has signed contracts with three different entities, namely Atmostat (ALCEN group, France), AREVA (France) and a consortium which consists of AMEC (United Kingdom), Iberdrola (Spain) and MIB (Spain). Each of these companies is to manufacture a prototype of a Blanket First-Wall panel, as well as carry out specific industrialisation studies for the fabrication of the series of the 215 panels and present a cost and schedule assessment.
The First Wall consists of 6-10 mm thick beryllium tile panels of 1 m x 1.5 m which are fixed to a bi-metallic support structure made from a 15-25 mm thick Copper Chromium Zirconium (CuCrZr) alloy bonded using Hot Isostatic Pressing (HIP) to a 40-50 mm thick 316L (N) stainless steel backing plate – together these components form the Blanket modules. The Blanket is the part of the ITER machine that acts as a first barrier and protects the vacuum vessel, which is the heart of the ITER machine, from the neutrons and other energetic particles that are produced by the hot plasma. The First Wall consists of 440 panels, of which F4E will provide about half and depending on the location of the modules in the Blanket, different design parameters are necessary. During operation, the ITER First Wall panels will be cooled by pressurised water.
“We are happy work on the Blanket First Wall continues to move forward”, says Francesco Zacchia, Blanket First Wall coordinator in the F4E In-Vessel Project Team dealing with the management of the contracts. “We now look forward with anticipation to the delivery which is foreseen for early 2017 and will qualify the successful companies to participate in a future F4E Call for tender for the manufacturing of the actual ITER Blanket First Wall”.
Source: F4E
A big nuclear-fusion project attempts to move from design to construction.
HERE is one way to squeeze energy from nuclear fusion: create and contain a roiling soup of ionised hydrogen atoms known as a plasma, and heat it to ten times the temperature of the sun’s core. Some of the fast-moving atomic nuclei will bash together with enough oomph to fuse. Gather the energy from fast-moving particles created in these collisions and you have a limitless (for hydrogen is abundant), comparatively clean energy source. It is an idea conceived in the 1950s, but yet to be born in a laboratory.
Here is one way that might make it happen: gather an international consortium of the fusion-minded, including the European Union, America, China, India, Japan, Russia and South Korea. Conspire to build a 23,000-tonne doughnut-shaped vessel called a tokamak, that is wrapped with 80,000km of superconducting wire, all to contain the plasma magnetically and, for the first time, produce fusion energy continuously. Call it the International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor; shorten the name to ITER for better PR. And farm out the design to the seven “domestic agency” partners, each completely in charge of the procurement and production of their bit (they will all have to agree to any changes, though, as the design of this technological beast inevitably evolves).
It sounds wonderfully egalitarian, in a technocratic sort of way. Timelines are slippery things, though, so delays will occur and costs will go up. That makes for more delays. Partners may drop out and come back as the political will to pay for the project comes and goes.
The story of ITER has become a tale of these shortcomings. The first of its components arrived at the reactor’s site in Cadarache, in the south of France, earlier this month, just as the foundations were finished. In the next week or so construction should start on the walls that will house its core: the doughnut-shaped vacuum vessel. Perhaps tellingly, no one can say exactly when even that will happen. There has already been a 30-month delay in the manufacture of the vacuum vessel. The most recently published schedule says the first plasma will be created in the vacuum vessel in 2020. That will now have to slip to 2023 or 2024, but the revised official schedule will not be published until mid-2015. The overall cost? Also unknown, but it is sure to surpass by a considerable sum the current official estimate of $20 billion.
The factors that have hobbled ITER from the start have not been concerns of nuclear physics or large-scale engineering. They have been problems of leadership and project management. Few would now argue that the initial design was adequate, or that the seven domestic agencies should have been allowed to have the absolute control they got over the bits of it they worked on. As delays and dissent cropped up within the domestic agencies, ITER’s management kept the other agencies in the dark, and stuck too long to timelines that were never feasible.
Most embarrassingly, a management assessment from last October that was leaked earlier this year derided the organisation along all these lines, and added that the project lacked a “nuclear safety culture”. America withheld 12% of its ITER funding this year, pending the implementation of every one of the assessment’s recommendations. A dissenting subcommittee of the Senate has proposed a budget that would see America pull out altogether next year, as it did in 1999 (it came back into the fold in 2003).
ITER’s core philosophy is to share between countries the risks, efforts and rewards of trying to crack the fusion-power problem—costs and delays be damned. The idea is that if the project proves successful, any of the domestic agencies involved should then be able to build its own version with the knowledge collaboratively gained.
Consensus among the ITER faithful is that it will accomplish its stated goal of extracting 500 megawatts of power from a continuously fusing plasma—about ten times as much power as is put in. Scientifically, nothing seems to stand in the way of this. But consider the National Ignition Facility, a star-crossed American effort to use lasers rather than magnetic fields to create fusion. It looked certain, on paper, that if engineers built a laser of a given size (the world’s largest, by some margin) and fired it at a target of a prescribed shape and composition, the result would be a net gain of energy. The laser and the targets were made; fusion “break-even”, however, was not. The facility has now switched its focus to “nuclear-stockpile stewardship” (modelling the behaviour of atom bombs).
What looks good according to the equations is thus not always—or even often—what works best in reality. But if ITER wants even the chance to test the science, it will first have to solve, in a comprehensive fashion, its human problems.
Source: economist.com
The project to build a demonstration fusion power reactor relies on hundreds of individual suppliers. It is the ITER Organization’s job to coordinate all of their contributions.
The seven members of the ITER project share the responsibility of building the ITER machine and facilities. It is the largest global research effort on nuclear fusion ever undertaken.
Ninety percent of contributions will be delivered in-kind. Members (China, EU, India, Japan, Russia, South Korea and the USA) will deliver components for the Tokamak and plant systems directly to the ITER Organization in France. Designing, manufacturing, transporting and assembling the 10 million components of the project, many of which are of exceptional size and weight, pose logistics and managerial challenges of colossal proportions.
ITER sought an off-the-shelf solution to manage the supply chain for components that are being manufactured and procured all over the world.
ITER also wanted cost-effective software that could bring in industry standards and best practices. Intergraph, engineering enterprise software provider for the power and nuclear sectors, among others, was awarded the contract to provide the software and services supporting the Assembly and Operation division of the ITER project. ITER contracted Intergraph to supply and implement off-the-shelf solutions to help manage construction, materials management, commissioning/testing, technical document and data management, as well as to bring industry best practice for these systems to ITER. These products also had to integrate seamlessly with existing ITER software, such as ITER Document Management,Engineering Data Base (EDB, including ITER's engineering tools) and SAP.
SmartPlant® Materials (SPMat) is able to track, trace and manage all components and parts of the ITER site in compliance with nuclear safety regulation. The tool will link on-site inventory management with construction planning to maximize cost-efficiency and avoid construction disruption.
SPMat will provide ITER Organization with central storage of logistics information and make possible effective management of logistics activities. The material catalogue specifications, bill of materials (BOM) and material take-off (MTO) requisitions, and procurement, tracing, warehousing and inspections information will all be centralized in SP Materials. This will enable each department or function to access whatever materials logistics data is needed for a task in the format most appropriate to that task. SP Materials configuration was delivered in May and is expected to continue acceptance testing until October, although in the meantime it is being used in a production environment for activities such as materials receiving.
All material deliveries to the ITER site will be loaded into SPMat. It will manage all materials for both domestic agency in-kind contracts and ITER Organization in-cash contracts with suppliers (see figures).
To help with these materials management processes in SPMat, interfaces have already been developed and tested between SPMat and EDB, SPMat and SAP as well as SPMat and the shipping data that will be provided by logistics provider Daher.
The data for all material deliverables that will arrive at the ITER site in Cadarache, France needs to be captured at the source (the supplier) and tracked through data received from Daher. When the delivery trucks arrive at site, the data in SPMat should match the delivery details and allow planning for final inspections and warehousing. A big focus of SPMat is on tracking and tracing of all materials from the source supplier to the ITER site.
This materials management process means that the materials in the SPMat warehouses are ready to interface with the next Intergraph product being implemented, SmartPlant Construction (SPC). SPC manages workface planning and interfaces to the project-assembly schedule in Primavera project management software. The Field Installation Work Packs in SPC (downloaded from Primavera) will interface with SPMat to determine the status of required materials and, when available, will automatically reserve the material, ready for automatic issuing to construction.
The main challenges for this part of the project were different states of design maturity in the components and an adequate 3D model for construction. Component and part numbering, BOM definition at each lifecycle stage, a central and common catalogue and specification are currently being defined and created. The tool will also be integrated with numerous other applications, including SAP.
As of April 2014, most of the project design and detailed design is ready and the first components are being manufactured. Component arrival will slowly ramp up during 2014 and 2015 and reach full speed from 2016. Initially, only two or three people will be trained to use SPMat, although technical staff, domestic agencies and IO suppliers will be able to access the information via a portal and by running specific reports in SPMat. As the shipping volume grows, new users will be properly trained by the core team as needed.
The next step is to proceed with the implementation of SmartPlant Construction and to integrate the systems.
Inventory management will be integrated with the construction planning before the first on-site installation and assembly start in 2015. SmartPlant Construction will be used to schedule, organize, track and report on assembly activities on-site (machine and systems) by browsing through the 3D model. The technical information and documentation will be centralized and managed using Intergraph product SmartPlant for Owner Operators.
Accurate and effective materials management and construction will pave the way for assembly activities, which have been carefully planned in a schedule that contains 40,000 lines for machine assembly alone. Assembly operations will require 1.5 million man hours extending over a period of four years, before arriving to the crucial point of testing the facilities and the Tokamak.
Surce: neimagazine.com
A multimillion contract for engineering integration of many state of the art instruments that will measure the biggest plasma generated by a fusion device has been signed between F4E and IDOM ADA, the Advanced Design and Analysis division of IDOM, a multinational company specialising in engineering, architecture and consultancy services based in Spain.
The value of the contract is in the range of 20 million EUR and is expected to run for at least four years. IDOM ADA will work with instrument designers in several public European fusion laboratories as well as experts in Japan, India, China and the US to deliver designs for the systems integration. Professor Henrik Bindslev, Director of F4E, emphasized that “through this contract we are seeing a clear example of knowledge transfer from laboratories to industry. Europe’s contribution to ITER, has been a catalyst encouraging the two poles of knowledge and competitiveness to work closer. A new chapter in the field of Diagnostics is opening that will help us analyse the ITER plasma, monitor it and improve our understanding of physics”. Mr. Fernando Querejeta, President of IDOM, stated that “we are very proud of the opportunity that we have been given to collaborate in what most likely will be the most important research project of the XXI century in the field of energy and engineering. This contract is another big step in our already important activity as science system providers for large scientific installations and instruments”.
The role of Diagnostics in ITER
The Diagnostics system will help us understand what exactly will be happening in the machine during the fusion reaction. Thanks to it we will able to study and control the plasma behaviour, measure its properties and extend our understanding of plasma physics. In simple terms, the system will act as the eyes and ears of the scientists offering them insight thanks to a vast range of cutting edge technologies. ITER will rely on approximately 50 diagnostic instruments that will offer experts an unparalleled view of the entire plasma and ensure the smooth operation of the machine. Given the duration of the plasma pulse, which will be 100 times longer than any fusion device currently in operation, the strong fluctuation levels and the extreme environment in the vessel, the diagnostic system will act as the guardian of the safe and sound operation of ITER.
Europe is responsible for roughly 25% of all Diagnostics in ITER.
The scope of this contract
This contract will deliver a comprehensive engineering design integrating around 20 diagnostics instruments into five of the ports giving access to the ITER plasma. In-vessel metallic containers will also be designed through this contract in order to protect the diagnostic equipment from the fierce plasma temperatures that may reach 150 million °C, and shield other parts of the machine from neutron radiation. The metallic shields will weigh between 5 tonnes and 20 tonnes each and will have to cope with extreme conditions like the high vacuum, colossal electromagnetic forces and high heat fluxes. In addition, other structures will be designed to house diagnostic instruments that will be mounted onto the Divertors cassettes of the machine, and even outside the vacuum vessel, as well as specialist flanges providing water and electrical connections to the diagnostic instruments whilst preserving the ITER vacuum.
Source: F4E
After months of preparation, the European Commission and the Culham Centre for Fusion Energy signed the operation contract for Europe’s largest fusion experiment.
Since 2000, JET operation was being carried out under the auspices of the European Fusion Development Agreement (EFDA). According to the in 2014 newly implemented EU fusion research structure, the Culham Centre for Fusion Energy (CCFE) will operate the JET facility under contract from the European Commission.
JET operation will be provided as an in-kind contribution to the EUROfusion Consortium, which is responsible for implementing the coordinated programme under a separate grant agreement with the Commission.
Lorne Horton, Head of the JET Exploitation Unit at JET, comments: ’I am pleased that we have been able to get this contract in place and expect that CCFE will continue to provide a first class facility for the community’s use. I am confident that JET will continue to provide crucial and unique input to ITER.’ ITER represents the next generation fusion experiment and will start operation in the early 2020’s.
The €283 million contract represents the largest in the history of JET with an unprecedented duration of five years. Tony Donné, Manager of the European Joint Programme is also satisfied with the finalisation of the contract: ’The fact that we can now rely on a five year contract until the end of 2018, makes it easier for us and CCFE to fulfil the goal defined in the new EU framework programme. That is to deliver what is agreed on in the ‘Roadmap to the realisation of fusion energy’.
Sourca: EFDA.org
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Przyszłe elektrownie termojądrowe mogą doświadczać mniejszych strat energii w spalanej plazmie niż dotychczas przewidywano. Autorzy badania - naukowcy z konsorcjum EUROfusion, w tym dr Michał Poradziński z Instytutu Fizyki Plazmy...
Czytaj więcej12-09-2024
Konsorcjum EUROfusion, wspierając postępy w badaniach nad energią z syntezy jądrowej, uruchomiło 15 nowych projektów badawczych, które angażują ekspertów z dziedziny data science z całej Europy. Projekty te wykorzystają największy...
Czytaj więcej21-06-2024
W ostatnim czasie dr hab. Agata Chomiczewska, prof. IFPiLM, oraz dr inż. Natalia Wendler wzięły udział w międzynarodowej konferencji Plasma Surface Interaction in Controlled Fusion Devices PSI-26 w Marsylii, podczas...
Czytaj więcej19-06-2024
W dniach 9-10 czerwca 2024 roku w Auli Wielkiej Politechniki Warszawskiej odbył się 2. Kongres "Nauka dla Społeczeństwa" pod hasłem "Tak nauka w Polsce wpływa na życie każdego człowieka". Instytut...
Czytaj więcej18-06-2024
Zakończyła się 17. edycja Letniej Szkoły Fizyki Plazmy Kudowa Summer School „Towards Fusion Energy”. W wydarzeniu zorganizowanym przez Instytut Fizyki Plazmy i Laserowej Mikrosyntezy (IFPiLM) w dniach 3-7 czerwca 2024...
Czytaj więcej17-06-2024
Dwa projekty zgłoszone przez pracowników IFPiLM, które znalazły się na rezerwowej liście w konkursach OPUS 25 i Preludium 22, otrzymały dofinansowanie. Sfinansowanie dodatkowych projektów badawczych w konkursach było możliwe dzięki zwiększeniu...
Czytaj więcej12-06-2024
Najbliższa edycja Pikniku Naukowego odbędzie się w sobotę, 15 czerwca 2024 roku, na PGE Narodowym w Warszawie. Temat przewodni wydarzenia: Nie do wiary! Na stoisku Instytutu Fizyki Plazmy i Laserowej Mikrosyntezy...
Czytaj więcej04-06-2024
W dniach 9-10 czerwca 2024 roku na terenie Politechniki Warszawskiej odbędzie się 2. Kongres „Nauka dla Społeczeństwa”. Honorowy patronat nad wydarzeniem objęli Minister Nauki i Urząd Patentowy RP. Kongres odbywa...
Czytaj więcej11-05-2024
Z wielkim smutkiem przyjęliśmy wiadomość o śmierci naszego przyjaciela dr. Hellmuta Schmidta (1935-2024). Nasz pierwszy kontakt z Hellmutem Schmidtem miał miejsce w okresie jego działalności w tzw. komitecie sterującym międzynarodowego centrum...
Czytaj więcej06-05-2024
Z okazji Dni Otwartych Funduszy Europejskich organizowanych w ramach obchodów 20-lecia Polski w Unii Europejskiej zapraszamy na wizytę w Instytucie Fizyki Plazmy i Laserowej Mikrosyntezy im. Sylwestra Kaliskiego. 10 maja o...
Czytaj więcej26-04-2024
Komisja Europejska uruchomiła konsultacje publiczne w sprawie: oceny okresowej programu Euratomu na lata 2021-2025 (interim evaluation of the Euratom Programme 2021-2025) oceny ex-ante przedłużenia programu (2026-2027) (ex-ante evaluation of the extension (2026-2027)...
Czytaj więcej22-04-2024
Zapraszamy na wykład dr inż. Natalii Wendler z IFPiLM w Narodowym Muzeum Techniki w Warszawie. Spotkanie odbędzie się 25 kwietnia 2024 r. o godz. 18.00. Tematem wystąpienia będą przełomowe wyniki badań...
Czytaj więcej11-04-2024
W związku z kolejną edycją BSBF – Big Science Business Forum (1 – 4 października 2024 r. Triest, Włochy) w Ambasadzie Włoskiej w Warszawie odbędzie się spotkanie "BIG SCIENCE BUSINESS FORUM 2024: TOWARDS A...
Czytaj więcej25-07-2025
In December 2022, the National Ignition Facility (NIF) at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (USA) marked a historic milestone in fusion science: an experiment produced 3.15 MJ of fusion energy from 2.05 MJ of laser...
Czytaj więcej04-06-2025
On May 22, 2025, the Wendelstein 7-X (W7-X) stellarator at the Max Planck Institute for Plasma Physics (IPP) in Greifswald concluded its latest experimental campaign with a major success: a...
Czytaj więcej20-02-2025
On February 12, 2025, the WEST tokamak, located at CEA Cadarache in southern France, set a new world record by sustaining fusion plasma for 1,337 seconds, or over 22 minutes....
Czytaj więcej27-01-2025
20 stycznia Parlament Europejski zorganizował swoją pierwszą debatę na temat energii z syntezy jądrowej, zatytułowaną „Zasilanie przyszłości Europy – Rozwój przemysłu syntezy jądrowej na rzecz niezależności energetycznej i innowacji”. Podczas...
Czytaj więcej17-12-2024
At the 49th General Assembly held in Barcelona, December 2024, Dr. Gianfranco Federici was elected as the new Programme Manager of EUROfusion. He succeeds Prof. Ambrogio Fasoli, who will return...
Czytaj więcej16-12-2024
EUROfusion and Fusion for Energy (F4E) have signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) to advance fusion research and development in Europe. This agreement reinforces cooperation in...
Czytaj więcej08-10-2024
John J. Hopfield and Geoffrey E. Hinton have been awarded the 2024 Nobel Prize in Physics "for foundational discoveries and inventions that enable machine learning with artificial neural networks." The Nobel...
Czytaj więcej10-09-2024
The Wendelstein 7-X, the world’s most advanced stellarator, is launching a new experimental campaign after a year of intensive maintenance and upgrades. This phase, known as OP2.2, begins on 10...
Czytaj więcej04-07-2024
On 3 July, ITER Director-General Pietro Barabaschi presented the new project baseline, under evaluation by the ITER Organization's governing body. This plan aims to ensure a robust start to scientific...
Czytaj więcej21-06-2024
The ITER Council convened this week for its 34th meeting, where nearly 100 attendees reviewed significant updates to the project baseline. The proposed changes aim to optimize the overall project...
Czytaj więcej04-04-2024
Dear fusion colleagues, As many of you will have heard by now, ITER will be hosting a first-ever workshop to engage with private sector fusion initiatives at the end of May,...
Czytaj więcej09-02-2024
On 8 February 2024, EUROfusion, in collaboration with the UK Atomic Energy Authority (UKAEA), proudly announced a new world record for the highest amount of fusion energy ever produced in...
Czytaj więcej01-02-2024
Are you a young professional contributing to the energy transition? The European Sustainable Energy Week (EUSEW) invites you to apply for its Young Energy Ambassadorship. EUSEW is committed to empowering the leaders of tomorrow,...
Czytaj więcej23-01-2024
The recruitment campaign for 2024-2026 Monaco-ITER Postdoctoral Fellowships has opened. We are looking for top candidates with an excellent track record of creativity and accomplishment. Research possibilities exist in many areas...
Czytaj więcej03-01-2024
For the preparation of the experimental programme of OP 2.2 and OP 2.3, we are pleased to invite you to submit experimental proposals. Submission of proposals will be possible in...
Czytaj więcej01-12-2023
The prospect of harnessing fusion energy is closer. The successful operation of JT-60SA, the most powerful experimental device to date, built by Europe and Japan, is a landmark achievement for...
Czytaj więcej26-10-2023
A momentous achievement in the field of nuclear fusion has been accomplished by a collaborative team of engineers from Europe and Japan. They have successfully generated tokamak plasma for the...
Czytaj więcej03-10-2023
Pierre Agostini, Ferenc Krausz and Anne L’Huillier are the winners of this year's Nobel Prize in Physics. It was awarded "for experimental methods that generate attosecond pulses of light for...
Czytaj więcej08-08-2023
The US National Ignition Facility (NIF) has achieved fusion ignition once again, building on its landmark 2022 success. This achievement, powered by hydrogen within a diamond capsule, signifies a major...
Czytaj więcej20-07-2023
Professor Ambrogio Fasoli became the new EUROfusion Programme Manager Elect. The decision was made by EUROfusion General Assembly at the meeting on 18 July 2023. His tenure will officially commence...
Czytaj więcej07-06-2023
From a survey of 26 private fusion companies and 34 supplier companies, the Fusion Industry Association—a US-registered non-profit independent trade association for the acceleration of the arrival of fusion power—predicts a...
Czytaj więcej19-04-2023
EUROfusion has launched the call for applications for the 2024 EUROfusion Engineering Grants (EEGs). These grants will provide funding for up to twenty outstanding early-career engineers to conduct research projects starting in...
Czytaj więcej10-04-2023
The new JT-60SA International Fusion School (JIFS), jointly funded and organized by Japan's National Institutes for Quantum Science and Technology (QST) and EUROfusion, aims to prepare the next generation of fusion physicists and engineers...
Czytaj więcej20-03-2023
The Xcitech course is an advanced course primarily aimed at young scientists and engineers at the graduate and post-graduate level who are currently working or interested in the area of fusion technology. It is...
Czytaj więcej17-03-2023
The Fusion Centre for Doctoral Training (CDT) and the UK Atomic Energy Authority (UKAEA) have worked with the fusion community to prepare a two-week program created to meet the needs of the emerging...
Czytaj więcej24-02-2023
Today, as we commemorate the anniversary of the invasion of Ukraine by Russia, the EUROfusion consortium stands in solidarity with our Ukrainian member and research colleagues. EUROfusion remains committed to supporting...
Czytaj więcej23-02-2023
Another target has been achieved only recently by the W7-X researchers, namely they managed to acquire an energy turnover of 1.3 gigajoules in the device, which is 17 times higher...
Czytaj więcej04-10-2022
Alain Aspect, John F. Clauser and Anton Zeilinger are the winners of this year's Nobel Prize in Physics. It was awarded “for experiments with entangled photons, establishing the violation of...
Czytaj więcej27-09-2022
A new wave of fusion energy experiments on UK Atomic Energy Authority’s record-breaking Joint European Torus (JET) started this month. EUROfusion researchers are using the famous JET machine to conduct a...
Czytaj więcej21-09-2022
Pietro Barabaschi has become the next Director-General of the ITER Organization as a result of the unanimous choice of the Council from among finalist candidates. In the transition period Dr....
Czytaj więcej07-07-2022
At a livestreamed Horizon EUROfusion event in Brussels on 5 July 2022, EUROfusion celebrated the start of conceptual design activities for Europe's first demonstration fusion power plant DEMO. This first-of-a-kind...
Czytaj więcej17-05-2022
This month, we have witnessed the successful lifting and lowering into the machine well of the first sub-section of the ITER plasma chamber. The weight of the component is the...
Czytaj więcej15-02-2022
Obtaining a burning plasma is a critical step towards self-sustaining fusion energy. A burning plasma is one in which the fusion reactions themselves are the primary source of heating in...
Czytaj więcej20-01-2022
Iconic fusion energy machine JET – which reaches controlled temperatures 10 times hotter than the core of the sun – completed its 100,000th live pulse last night. Weighing 2,800 tonnes, the...
Czytaj więcej20-12-2021
15 December 2021 saw the EUROfusion consortium signing the Grant Agreement under Horizon Europe, the European Framework Programme from 2021 – 2027, in an aim to launch comprehensive R&D approach...
Czytaj więcej25-10-2021
The European research consortium EUROfusion presents a game-based exhibition blending art, science and technology to explore fusion energy and get visitors' input on how fusion could fit into society. Fusion, Power...
Czytaj więcej06-10-2021
Laureatami tegorocznej Nagrody Nobla z fizyki zostali Syukuro Manabe, Klaus Hasselmann i Giorgio Parisi. Nagrodę przyznano im „za przełomowy wkład w zrozumienie złożonych systemów fizycznych”. Manabe i Hasselmann zostali uhonorowani „za...
Czytaj więcej16-08-2021
On Aug. 8, 2021, an experiment at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory’s (LLNL’s) National Ignition Facility (NIF) made a significant step toward ignition, achieving a yield of more than 1.3 megajoules...
Czytaj więcej01-06-2021
It turned possible for the Chinese scientists from Hefei to achieve a plasma temperature of 120 million degrees Celsius for 101 seconds. Thus they set a new world record about...
Czytaj więcej31-05-2021
The exhaust system proved commercially effective for fusion power plants thanks to the UK Atomic Energy Authority’s new MAST Upgrade experiment at CCFE. Culham scientists performing testing applied the Super-X system...
Czytaj więcej02-04-2021
How to track impurities such as titanium, iron, nickel, copper or tungsten migrating throughout fusion plasmas? It is possible that tiny hand-made pellets manage to perform this task. The study...
Czytaj więcej29-03-2021
30 years ago, on 21 March 1991, the ASDEX Upgrade experimental device at Max Planck Institute for Plasma Physics (IPP) in Germany generated its first plasma. The main aim of...
Czytaj więcej22-03-2021
The WEST experimental campaign which took place between the 27th of November and the 27th of January 2021 proved successful with testing of a significant number of ITER-like Plasma Facing...
Czytaj więcej03-03-2021
The scientific world can boast about efficient energizing of the toroidal field magnet, which made it possible to attain its full magnetic field. Plasma inside the vessel will be generated...
Czytaj więcej10-02-2021
The team of engineers from the Research Instruments (RI), Germany, has successfully completed the ITER Inner-Vertical Target (IVT) prototype’s engineering phase. The very complex component was produced no matter how...
Czytaj więcej07-01-2021
The recommendations of the DEMO expert panel will facilitate the implementation of the next step of the Roadmap aimed at the construction of the demonstration power plant. Review-based approach makes...
Czytaj więcej02-11-2020
We have recently seen the launch of the MAST Upgrade tokamak which produced the first plasma (the video is available on YouTube). This brings us closed to obtain safe low-carbon...
Czytaj więcej29-10-2020
Similarly to the cycle of nature, winter is coming also in the field of science. Namely, the cool down of the 140 tons superconducting Toroidal Field magnet has started under...
Czytaj więcej08-10-2020
A new Cooperation Agreement between the international ITER fusion project, the Italian Consorzio RFX and EUROfusion will allow European researchers from eight countries to join the Neutral Beam Test Facility...
Czytaj więcej10-08-2020
Ten years after the start of construction in August 2010, ITER marked a new chapter in its long history. This historic moment was witnesses by distinguished guests, including French President...
Czytaj więcej