ITER applauds NIF fusion breakthrough
Both approaches require extreme engineering: high precision, advanced materials, and further innovation on how to efficiently harness the heat produced by the fusion reaction. For both approaches, the aim is to produce more energy from the fusion fuel than the energy used to heat that fuel and to demonstrate that the self-heating of the DT gas by the fusion reaction becomes larger than its heat losses. This is what NIF has demonstrated.
The trajectory of NIF's recent successes is promising. The best previous performance achieved, in August 2021, was 1.35 megajoules, about 70% of the laser energy delivered—which in turn was about 25 times better than NIF's 2018 experiments.
Over the past several years, NIF's experiments have achieved ever greater precision, leading to a higher Q value (output versus input). In experiments last August, the output energy, 1.35 megajoules, was about 70% of the input laser energy used. Many were hopeful that a net energy gain was not far away. That goal was reached with the experiments announced today. Also important to consider is that only a small fraction (~1%) of the laser input power is reflected from the walls of the Hohlraum onto the DT target; therefore from a purely plasma energy balance standpoint the value of Q is significantly higher (i.e., achieving ignition).
"This is an exciting time for fusion energy," said ITER Director-General Barabaschi. "These results from NIF are a further confirmation of the science of fusion energy. It gives all of us—here at ITER as well as across the global fusion R&D community—renewed motivation as we tackle the remaining engineering challenges that lie ahead for self-heated fusion plasmas."
Click to read press releases from the US Department of Energy and Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory.