- Timeline of nuclear fusion
Timeline of significant events in the study and use of
nuclear fusion :*
1929 - Atkinson and Houtermans used the measured masses of low mass elements and applied Einstein's discovery that E=mc2 to predict that large amounts of energy could be released by fusing small nuclei together.
*1932 -Mark Oliphant discoveredhelium 3 andtritium , and that heavyhydrogen nuclei could be made to react with each other.
*1939 -Hans Bethe won theNobel Prize in physics (awarded 1967) "for his contributions to the theory of nuclear reactions, especially his discoveries concerning the energy production in stars."
*1941 -Enrico Fermi proposed the idea of using a (still hypothetical) fission weapon to initiate nuclear fusion in a mass of hydrogen toEdward Teller . Teller became enthusiastic about the idea and worked on it (unsuccessfully) throughout theManhattan Project .
*1947 First kiloampere plasma created by a team at theImperial College ,London , in a doughnut shaped glass vacuum vessel. Plasmas are entirely unstable and only last fractions of seconds.
*1951 - A press release fromArgentina claims that theirHuemul Project had produced controlled nuclear fusion. This prompted a wave of responses in other countries, especially the U.S.
**Lyman Spitzer started thePrinceton Plasma Physics Laboratory (or PPPL) which was originally codenamed Project Matterhorn - most early work was done on a type of magnetic confinement device called astellarator .
**James L. Tuck , an English physicist, began research atLos Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) under the codename ofProject Sherwood , working on pinch magnetic confinement devices. (Some people claimed that the project was named Sherwood based on Friar Tuck. This claim is corroborated in a brief biographical sketch written by Tuck [...the first money to be allocated [to controlled nuclear research] happened to be for Tuck, and was diverted from Project Lincoln, in the Hood Laboratory. The coincidence of names prompted the well-known cover name "Project Sherwood". James L. Tuck, [http://bayesrules.net/JamesTuckVitaeAndBiography.pdf "Curriculum Vita and Autobiography,"] Declassified document from Los Alamos National Laboratory (1974), reproduced with permission.] )
*1951 -Edward Teller andStanislaw Ulam atLos Alamos National Laboratory develop theTeller-Ulam design for thehydrogen bomb , allowing for the development of multi-megaton weapons.
*1952 - Cousins and Ware built a small toroidal pinch device inEngland , and demonstrated that instabilities in the plasma make pinch devices inherently unstable.
*1952,Ivy Mike shot ofOperation Ivy : The first detonation of ahydrogen bomb , yield 10.4 megatons of TNT out of a fusion fuel of liquid deuterium.
*1953 - pinch devices in the US and USSR attempted to take the reactions to fusion levels without worrying about stability. Both reported detections ofneutron s, which were later explained as non-fusion in nature.
*1954 - ZETA device started operation at Harwell south ofOxford in England.
*1958 - American, British and Soviet scientists began to share previously classified fusion research, as their countries declassified controlled fusion work as part of theAtoms for Peace conference inGeneva
*1958 - ZETA experiments ended. Several firings produced neutron spikes that the researchers initially attributed to fusion, but later realized were due to other effects. Last few firings showed an odd "quiet period" of long stability in a system that otherwise appeared to prove itself unstable. Research on pinch machines generally died off as ZETA appeared to be the best that could be done.
*1961 - TheSoviet Union test the most powerfulhydrogen bomb , theTsar Bomba (50 megatons).
*1965 (approximate) - The 12 beam "4 pi laser" using ruby as the lasing medium is developed at LLNL includes a gas-filled target chamber of about 20 centimeters in diameter.
*1967 - Demonstration ofFarnsworth-Hirsch Fusor appeared to generate neutrons in a nuclear reaction.
*1968 - Results from the T-3 Soviet magnetic confinement device, called atokamak , whichIgor Tamm andAndrei Sakharov had been working on - showed the temperatures in their machine to be over an order of magnitude higher than what was expected by the rest of the community. The Western scientists visited the experiment and verified the high temperatures and confinement, sparking a wave of optimism for the prospects of the tokamak, which is still the dominant magnetic confinement device today, as well as construction of new experiments.
*1972 - The first neodymium-doped glass (Nd:glass) laser for ICF research, the "Long Path laser " is completed at LLNL and is capable of delivering ~50 joules to a fusion target.
*1974 - Taylor re-visited ZETA results of 1958 and explained that the quiet-period was in fact very interesting. This led to the development of "reversed field pinch", now generalized as "self-organizing plasmas", an ongoing line of research.
** Construction completes andinertial confinement fusion experiments begin on the two beamJanus laser at theLawrence Livermore National Laboratory .
*1975 - Experiments commence on the single beam LLNLCyclops laser , testing new optical designs for future ICF lasers.
*1976 - Design work on JET, the Joint European Torus, began.
** The two beamArgus laser is completed at LLNL and experiments involving more advanced laser-target interactions are begun.
*1977 - The 20 beamShiva laser at LLNL is completed and is capable of delivering 10.2 kilojoules of infrared energy on target. At a price of $25 million and a size approaching that of a football field, the Shiva laser is the first of the "megalasers" at LLNL and brings the field of ICF research fully within the realm of "big science ".
*1978 - The JET project was given the go-ahead by then EC. The chosen site was an ex-RAF airfield south east ofOxford , UK.
*1982 -Tore Supra construction was started atCadarache ,France . Its superconducting magnets permitted it to generate a strong permanent toroidal magnetic field. [http://www-drfc.cea.fr/gb/cea/ts/ts.htm]
*1983 - JET was completed on time and on budget. First plasmas achieved.
**TheNOVETTE laser at LLNL comes on line and is used as a test bed for the next generation of ICF lasers, specifically theNOVA laser .
*1984 - The huge 10 beamNOVA laser at LLNL is completed and switches on in December. NOVA would ultimately produce a maximum of 120 kilojoules of infrared laser light during a nanosecond pulse in a 1989 experiment.
*1985 - TheJapan ese tokamak,JT-60 was completed. First plasmas achieved.
*1988 - TheT-15 , Soviet tokamak with superconducting helium-cooled coils was completed.
*1988 - The Conceptual Design Activity for the International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor (ITER ), the successor toT-15 ,TFTR , JET andJT-60 , began. Participants wereEURATOM ,Japan ,Soviet Union andUnited States . It ended in1990 .
*1988 - The first plasma was produced inTore Supra in April. [http://www-drfc.cea.fr/gb/cea/ts/ts.htm]
*1989 - On March 23, twoUtah electrochemists,Stanley Pons andMartin Fleischmann , announced that they had achievedcold fusion : fusion reactions which could occur at room temperatures. However, they made their announcements before any peer review of their work was performed, and no subsequent experiments by other researchers revealed any evidence of fusion.
*1990 - Decision to construct the NIF "beamlet" laser at LLNL is made.
*1991 - The START Tokamak fusion experiment began inCulham . The experiment would eventually achieve a record beta (plasma pressure compared to magnetic field pressure) of 40% using aneutral beam injector . It was the first design that adapted the conventional toroidal fusion experiments into a tighter spherical design.
*1992 - The Engineering Design Activity for theITER began. Participants wereEURATOM ,Japan ,Russia andUnited States . It ended in2001 .
*1993 - TheTFTR tokamak at Princeton (PPPL) experimented with 50%deuterium , 50%tritium , eventually producing as much as 10 megawatts of power from a controlled fusion reaction.
*1994 - NIF Beamlet laser is complete and begins experiments validating the expected performance of NIF.
*1996 - A record was reached atTore Supra : a plasma duration of two minutes with a current of almost 1 million amperes driven non-inductively by 2.3 MW of lower hybrid frequency waves (i.e. 280 MJ of injected and extracted energy). This result was possible due to the actively cooled plasma-facing components installed in the machine. This result opened the way to the active control of steady state plasma discharges and the associated physics. [http://www-drfc.cea.fr/gb/cea/ts/ts.htm]
*1997 - The JET tokamak in the UK produced 16 MW of fusion power - the current world record for fusion power. Four megawatts ofalpha particle self-heating was achieved.
**Groundbreaking ceremony held for theNational Ignition Facility (NIF).
**Combining a field-reversed pinch with an imploding magnetic cylinder resulted in the new Magnetized Target Fusion concept in the U.S.. In this system a "normal" lower density plasma device was explosively squeezed using techniques developed for high-speed gun research.
*1998 - TheJT-60 tokamak in Japan produced a high performance reversed shear plasma with the equivalent fusion amplification factor of 1.25 - the current world record of Q.
*1999 - TheUnited States withdrew from theITER project.
**The START Experiment was succeeded by MAST.
*2001 - Building construction for the immense 192 beam 500 terawatt NIF project is completed and construction of laser beamlines and target bay diagnostics commences. The NIF is expected to take its first full system shot in 2010.
**Negotiations Meeting on the Joint Implementation ofITER begins. Participants wereCanada ,European Union ,Japan andRussia .
*2002 - Claims and counter-claims were published regardingbubble fusion , in which a table-top apparatus was reported as producing small-scale fusion in a liquid undergoingacoustic cavitation . Like cold fusion, it was later dismissed.
**European Union proposedCadarache inFrance andVandellos inSpain as candidate sites forITER whileJapan proposedRokkasho .
*2003 - TheUnited States rejoined theITER project, andChina andRepublic of Korea newly joined whileCanada withdrew.
*2003 -Cadarache inFrance selected as the European Candidate Site forITER .
**Sandia National Laboratories began fusion experiments in theZ machine .
*2004 - TheUnited States dropped its own project, the Fusion Ignition Research Experiment (FIRE), to focus resources onITER .
*2005 - Following final negotiations between the EU and Japan,ITER choseCadarache overRokkasho for the site of the reactor. In concession, Japan was made the host site for a related materials research facility and was granted rights to fill 20% of the project's research posts while providing 10% of the funding.
**The NIF fires its first bundle of 8 beams achieving the highest ever energy laser pulse of 152.8 kJ (infrared).
*2006 - China'sEAST test reactor is completed, the first tokamak experiment to use superconducting magnets to generate both the toroidal and poloidal fields.
*Construction ofITER was originally planned to start at the end of 2005, but will probably be delayed until 2008.Notes
External links
* [http://www.sciencemuseum.org.uk/on-line/fusion/famous.asp Fusion experiments from the British Science Museum]
*International Fusion Research Council, [http://www.iop.org/EJ/toc/0029-5515/45/10A Status report on fusion research] , "Nuclear Fusion" 45:10A, October 2005.
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