Micro Fusion Fuel Cells: Difference between revisions

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'''[[Micro Fusion]] [[Fuel Cell]]s''' (also referred to as '''Microfusion Cells''' or '''μ-Fusion Reactors''') are compact, high-energy-density power sources based on controlled nuclear fusion reactions. They represent the next-generation powerplant for advanced [[Magneto Speeder]]s and high-demand systems at [[Tho'ra HQ]].
{{Infobox
| title      = Micro Fusion Fuel Cells
| image      = [[File:Animated micro fusion turbine smooth loop.gif|250px]]
| caption    = Micro fusion reactor core — continuous operation
| header1    = Overview
| label2    = Type
| data2      = Compact nuclear fusion power cell
| label3    = Developer
| data3      = [[Clan Tho'ra]] / [[Earth Intelligence Network]]
| label4    = Introduction
| data4      = [[2035]]–[[2038]] (experimental)
| label5    = Status
| data5      = Operational by [[2040]]
| header6    = Physics
| label7    = Primary Reaction
| data7      = D-T → He-4 + n (17.6 MeV)
| label8    = Target Reaction
| data8      = p-B11 → 3 He-4 (8.7 MeV, aneutronic)
| label9    = Confinement
| data9      = Electrostatic (IEC) → magnetic (compact tokamak)
| label10    = Plasma Temperature
| data10    = 10–15 keV (D-T) · 300 keV (p-B11)
| label11    = Lawson Product
| data11    = >10²¹ keV·s/m³ (D-T target)
| header12  = Specifications
| label13    = Power Output
| data13    = 5–50 kW continuous (scalable)
| label14    = Energy Density
| data14    = ~10⁸ Wh/kg (fuel only)
| label15    = Dimensions
| data15    = 50 × 40 × 30 cm (prototype)
| label16    = Weight
| data16    = 40–120 kg (prototype) · <30 kg (target)
| label17    = Shielding
| data17    = B₄C composite (D-T) · minimal (p-B11)
| label18    = Cooling
| data18    = Liquid lithium blanket / ceramic loop
| below      = ''Generation-2 power for [[Magneto Speeder]]''
}}


{| class="infobox" style="width:300px; font-size:90%; border:1px solid #aaa; background:#f9f9f9; margin:0.5em 0 0.5em 1em; padding:0.2em; float:right;"
'''Micro Fusion Fuel Cells''' ('''μ-Fusion Cells''', '''Microfusion Reactors''') are compact, high-energy-density power sources based on controlled nuclear fusion of light nuclei. They represent the primary powerplant for the [[Magneto Speeder]] and high-demand systems at [[Tho'ra HQ]], replacing [[Flash Hydrogen Fuel Cell]]s for applications requiring sustained multi-kilowatt output.
! colspan="2" | '''Micro Fusion Fuel Cells'''
 
Development progresses through two phases:
* '''Phase 1''' (2035–2040): Deuterium-tritium (D-T) fusion with neutron shielding
* '''Phase 2''' (2040+): Aneutronic proton-boron-11 (p-B11) with direct energy conversion
 
== Nuclear Fusion Fundamentals ==
 
=== Fusion Reactions ===
The key reactions in the micro fusion development pathway:
 
'''Deuterium-Tritium (Phase 1):'''
<math>{}^2\text{H} + {}^3\text{H} \rightarrow {}^4\text{He}\,(3.52\,\text{MeV}) + n\,(14.1\,\text{MeV})</math>
 
'''Deuterium-Helium-3 (Intermediate):'''
<math>{}^2\text{H} + {}^3\text{He} \rightarrow {}^4\text{He}\,(3.67\,\text{MeV}) + p\,(14.7\,\text{MeV})</math>
 
'''Proton-Boron-11 (Phase 2, target):'''
<math>p + {}^{11}\text{B} \rightarrow 3\,{}^4\text{He} + 8.7\,\text{MeV}</math>
 
{| class="wikitable"
|+ Fusion Reaction Comparison
|-
|-
| '''Type''' || Compact nuclear fusion power cell
! Reaction !! Q-value (MeV) !! Optimal T (keV) !! <math>\langle\sigma v\rangle_{\text{max}}</math> (cm³/s) !! Neutrons? !! Fuel Source
|-
|-
| '''Developer''' || [[Tho'ra Clan]] / [[Earth Intelligence Network]] (in-house R&D)
| D-T || 17.6 || 13.6 || 8.5 × 10⁻¹⁶ || '''Yes''' (14.1 MeV) || Seawater + Li breeding
|-
|-
| '''Manufacturer''' || In-house fabrication at [[Tho'ra HQ]] (prototype scale)
| D-He3 || 18.3 || 58 || 2.6 × 10⁻¹⁶ || Minimal (side) || He-3 rare (lunar regolith)
|-
|-
| '''Generation''' || Experimental / Generation 1 (pre-aneutronic variants)
| D-D || 3.65 || 15 || 1.8 × 10⁻¹⁷ || Partial || Seawater
|-
|-
| '''Introduction''' || [[2035]]–[[2038]] (first experimental integration)
| '''p-B11''' || '''8.7''' || '''148''' || '''4.6 × 10⁻¹⁶'''  || '''No'''* || '''Seawater + minerals'''
|-
|-
| '''Status''' || Prototype operational (limited deployment by [[2040]])
| colspan="6" | ''*p-B11 produces < 1% neutrons via side channels, manageable with thin B₄C shielding''
|-
| '''Primary User''' || Magneto Speeder fleet, advanced psi-tech systems, [[Tho'ra HQ]] high-load infrastructure
|-
| '''Role''' || High-output, long-duration power for atmospheric gliding, psi-tech arrays, and deep-zone operations
|-
| '''Fuel''' || Deuterium-tritium (early) → advanced aneutronic (target)
|-
| '''Output''' || 5–50 kW continuous (scalable via stacking)
|-
| '''Energy density''' || Orders of magnitude higher than chemical systems (theoretical)
|-
| '''Exhaust''' || Helium + low-level neutrons (early variants); near-zero radiation (target)
|}
|}


== Overview ==
=== Fusion Cross-Sections ===
Micro Fusion Fuel Cells are experimental compact fusion reactors designed to provide sustained high-energy output for advanced propulsion and psi-tech systems. Unlike [[Flash Hydrogen Fuel Cell]]s, which rely on chemical hydrogen release, micro-fusion generates power through controlled nuclear fusion of light nuclei, offering near-limitless energy density for long-range and high-demand missions.
The fusion cross-section <math>\sigma(E)</math> determines reaction probability at a given energy. For D-T, the Gamow peak formulation: <ref>Bosch, H.-S. & Hale, G.M. (1992). "Improved formulas for fusion cross-sections and thermal reactivities." ''Nucl. Fusion'' 32(4), 611–631.</ref>
 
<math>\sigma(E) = \frac{S(E)}{E} \exp\left(-\sqrt{\frac{E_G}{E}}\right)</math>
 
where:
* <math>S(E)</math> is the astrophysical S-factor (encodes nuclear physics)
* <math>E_G = (2\pi\alpha Z_1 Z_2)^2 \cdot \frac{\mu c^2}{2}</math> is the Gamow energy
* <math>\alpha \approx 1/137</math> is the fine structure constant
* <math>\mu</math> is the reduced mass
 
For D-T: <math>E_G \approx 1{,}100\,\text{keV}</math>, <math>S(0) \approx 1{,}100\,\text{keV·barn}</math>
 
The thermal reactivity (Maxwellian-averaged):
 
<math>\langle\sigma v\rangle = \left(\frac{8}{\pi \mu}\right)^{1/2} \frac{1}{(kT)^{3/2}} \int_0^\infty \sigma(E) \cdot E \cdot \exp\left(-\frac{E}{kT}\right) dE</math>
 
=== The Lawson Criterion ===
For a self-sustaining fusion plasma, the triple product must exceed: <ref>Lawson, J.D. (1957). "Some Criteria for a Power Producing Thermonuclear Reactor." ''Proc. Phys. Soc. B'' 70(1), 6–10.</ref>
 
<math>n \cdot T \cdot \tau_E > L_{\text{crit}}</math>
 
where <math>n</math> is ion density, <math>T</math> is temperature, and <math>\tau_E</math> is energy confinement time.
 
For D-T at optimum temperature (~14 keV):
 
<math>n \tau_E > 1.5 \times 10^{20}\,\text{s/m}^3</math>
 
or equivalently:
 
<math>n T \tau_E > 2.1 \times 10^{21}\,\text{keV·s/m}^3</math>
 
For p-B11, the requirement is ~500× more demanding:
 
<math>n T \tau_E > 10^{24}\,\text{keV·s/m}^3</math>
 
This is why p-B11 is the ''target'' reaction — it requires significant advances in confinement beyond what D-T demands.
 
=== Fusion Power Density ===
The volumetric power output of a 50:50 D-T plasma:
 
<math>P_{\text{fusion}} = \frac{n^2}{4} \langle\sigma v\rangle Q_{\text{fusion}}</math>
 
At <math>n = 10^{20}\,\text{m}^{-3}</math>, <math>T = 14\,\text{keV}</math>:
 
<math>P_{\text{fusion}} = \frac{(10^{20})^2}{4} \times 8.5 \times 10^{-22} \times 17.6 \times 1.6 \times 10^{-13} \approx 6\,\text{MW/m}^3</math>
 
A micro-fusion cell with just 10 cm³ of plasma at this density produces ~60 W of fusion power. Scaling to 1 L of plasma yields 6 kW — within the target range for [[Magneto Speeder]] applications.
 
== Confinement Approaches ==
 
=== Phase 1: Inertial Electrostatic Confinement (IEC) ===
Early prototypes use a modified Polywell / Farnsworth-Hirsch fusor geometry: <ref>Rider, T.H. (1995). "A general critique of inertial-electrostatic confinement fusion systems." ''Phys. Plasmas'' 2(6), 1853–1872.</ref>
 
* '''Geometry''': Polyhedral magnetic cusp with electrostatic well
* '''Confinement''': Ions electrostatically focused to central convergence zone
* '''Advantage''': Simple construction, no massive magnet systems
* '''Limitation''': Ion-ion thermalization limits net gain (Rider critique)
* '''Mitigation''': Pulsed operation with high-voltage staging
 
=== Phase 2: Compact Tokamak / Spherical Torus ===
Mature units transition to high-field compact tokamak design inspired by MIT's SPARC/ARC architecture: <ref>Creely, A.J. et al. (2020). "Overview of the SPARC tokamak." ''J. Plasma Phys.'' 86(5), 865860502.</ref>
 
* '''Magnets''': High-temperature superconducting (HTS) REBCO tape at 20+ T
* '''Plasma radius''': ~15–25 cm (micro scale)
* '''Aspect ratio''': ~1.6 (spherical torus geometry for improved stability)
* '''Bootstrap current fraction''': >50% (reduced external drive needs)
 
The high-field approach enables dramatic size reduction:
 
<math>\beta \propto \frac{nkT}{B^2/2\mu_0} \implies n \propto B^2 \quad \text{(at fixed } \beta \text{)}</math>
 
Doubling field strength from 5T to 20T increases achievable density by 16×, enabling fusion-relevant conditions in a desk-sized device.
 
== Direct Energy Conversion ==
For p-B11 (Phase 2), the charged alpha products enable direct electric conversion without a thermal cycle:
 
<math>\eta_{\text{direct}} = 1 - \frac{T_{\text{exhaust}}}{T_{\text{plasma}}} \cdot f_{\text{scatter}}</math>
 
Practical target: >70% conversion efficiency via:
* '''Traveling-wave direct converter''': Decelerating alphas in RF field → AC electricity
* '''Venetian-blind collector''': Electrostatic deceleration → DC electricity
* '''Advantage''': No steam turbine, no coolant loop, no Carnot limit
 
Compare to thermal conversion of D-T (limited by Carnot):
 
<math>\eta_{\text{Carnot}} = 1 - \frac{T_{\text{cold}}}{T_{\text{hot}}} \approx 1 - \frac{600}{5000} \approx 88\% \text{ (theoretical max, practical ~40%)}</math>
 
== Fuel Supply ==
'''Deuterium''': Abundant in seawater at 33 mg/L. The world's oceans contain ~10¹³ tonnes — sufficient for billions of years at projected consumption.
 
<math>\text{D in oceans} = 1.4 \times 10^{18}\,\text{m}^3 \times 33\,\text{g/m}^3 = 4.6 \times 10^{16}\,\text{kg}</math>
 
'''Tritium''': Bred from lithium blanket:
<math>{}^6\text{Li} + n \rightarrow {}^4\text{He} + {}^3\text{H} + 4.8\,\text{MeV}</math>
 
'''Boron-11''': 80% of natural boron. Global reserves: >1 billion tonnes (Turkey alone: ~70% of world supply).
 
== Radiation & Shielding ==


Micro Fusion Fuel Cells falls into the [[Fusion Tech]] tech tree.
=== D-T Phase ===
The 14.1 MeV neutron requires shielding. Boron carbide (B₄C) is the primary moderator:


The technology remains in prototype phase at Tho'ra HQ, with early units integrated into Magneto Speeder prototypes by [[2035]]–[[2038]]. Full maturation and aneutronic variants are targeted for the late [[2030]]s to early [[2040]]s.
<math>\Phi(x) = \Phi_0 \cdot e^{-\Sigma_t x}</math>


== Design & Specifications ==
where <math>\Sigma_t</math> is the macroscopic total cross-section. For B₄C at 14 MeV: <math>\Sigma_t \approx 0.12\,\text{cm}^{-1}</math>, giving a '''half-value layer of ~5.8 cm'''.
* '''Reactor core''': Electrostatic or inertial confinement (early prototypes); advanced aneutronic target (p–B11 or similar)
* '''Fuel''': Deuterium-tritium (DT) in initial units; progressing toward proton-boron-11 (p–B11) or deuterium-helium-3 (D–He3) for reduced neutron output
* '''Power output''': 5–50 kW continuous per unit (scalable via modular stacking)
* '''Energy density''': Extremely high (theoretical ~10^8–10^9 Wh/kg, orders of magnitude above chemical batteries or hydrogen fuel cells)
* '''Dimensions''': Desk-sized prototype (~50 × 40 × 30 cm); target miniaturization to ~30 × 20 × 15 cm
* '''Weight''': 40–120 kg (early prototypes); target <30 kg for vehicle integration
* '''Heat management''': Liquid-metal or advanced ceramic cooling loops
* '''Safety features''': Magnetic quench protection, neutron shielding (early), tritium breeding blanket (future)


== Key Systems ==
A 15 cm B₄C shell reduces neutron flux by:
* '''Confinement chamber''': Electrostatic grid or laser/plasma pinch for initial fusion ignition
* '''Fuel injection & breeding''': Tritium self-breeding blanket (DT mode); direct p–B11 fuel feed (advanced)
* '''Power conversion''': Direct electric conversion (target) or thermal cycle with thermoelectric generators
* '''Control electronics''': Integrated with Starcom/Navcom for mission-aware power throttling and Ra/PsiSys interface
* '''Shielding''': Boron-carbide composite (early); advanced metamaterials (future) to minimize neutron flux


== Operational Use ==
<math>\frac{\Phi}{\Phi_0} = e^{-0.12 \times 15} = e^{-1.8} \approx 16.5\%</math>
* '''[[Magneto Speeder]] primary propulsion''': Sustained high-power output for magneto-hydrodynamic and magneto-gravitic lift/glide
* '''[[Tho'ra HQ]] high-demand systems''': Powering large symbology arrays, psi-tech chambers, Ra sustainment, and defensive shielding
* '''[[Portable Field Reactor]]s''': Limited deployment in forward outposts for extended reclamation/exfiltration missions
* '''Transition role''': Hybrid use with [[Flash Hydrogen Fuel Cell]]s during early Magneto Speeder development ([[2035]]–[[2038]])


== Development History ==
Additional reduction achieved via lithium-6 enriched liner (captures thermalized neutrons and breeds tritium simultaneously).
* '''Pre-[[2035]]''': Theoretical research and small-scale lab tests (inspired by early [[2020]]s fusion startups and alliance-shared data)
* '''[[2035]]–[[2038]]''': First experimental micro-reactors fabricated at Tho'ra HQ; integrated into Magneto Speeder prototypes for low-power testing
* '''[[2038]]–[[2040]]''': Refinement toward aneutronic reactions; output scaled to mission requirements
* '''[[2040]] onward''': Mature units become standard for high-energy operations as alliance capabilities expand


== Advantages & Limitations ==
=== p-B11 Phase ===
* '''Advantages''':
Aneutronic: primary products are charged alphas. Residual neutron production from side reactions (<1%) requires only thin B₄C liner (~2 cm). Total shielding mass drops from ~50 kg (D-T) to ~5 kg (p-B11).
** Near-limitless energy density for long-duration missions
** Minimal refueling needs (fusion fuel lasts years/decades)
** High output for advanced propulsion and psi-tech


* '''Limitations''':
== Development Timeline ==
** Early variants produce neutrons and heat (shielding required)
{| class="wikitable"
** Complex fabrication and tritium handling
|+ Micro Fusion Development Milestones
** Still experimental — net-positive energy gain at micro scale not yet achieved
|-
! Year !! Milestone !! Configuration
|-
| 2035 || First sustained D-T plasma in IEC prototype || Polywell, Q < 1
|-
| 2037 || Net energy gain achieved (Q > 1) || IEC with staged acceleration
|-
| 2038 || First integration into Magneto Speeder || 5 kW continuous, 45 kg
|-
| 2039 || Compact tokamak prototype || HTS magnets, 20T
|-
| 2040 || Operational D-T cells at 50 kW || Fleet deployment
|-
| 2042 || First p-B11 demonstration || Laser-assisted ignition
|-
| 2044 || Aneutronic cells operational || Direct conversion, <30 kg
|}


== See also ==
== See Also ==
* [[Flash Hydrogen Fuel Cells]]
* [[Flash Hydrogen Fuel Cell]]
* [[Fusion Drive]]
* [[Fusion Drives]]
* [[MHD Core]]
* [[Magneto Speeder]]
* [[Magneto Speeder]]
* [[Hydro Speeder]]
* [[Star Speeder]]
* [[Tho'ra HQ]]
* [[Tho'ra HQ]]
* [[Earth Intelligence Network]]
* [[Clan Tho'ra]]
* [[Tho'ra Clan]]
* [[Ra]] ([[PsiSys]])


== References ==
== References ==
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[[Category:Technology]]
[[Category:Technology]]
[[Category:Power Systems]]
[[Category:Power Systems]]
[[Category:Fusion Tech]]
[[Category:Earth Intelligence Network]]
[[Category:Earth Intelligence Network]]
[[Category:Tho'ra Clan]]
[[Category:Clan Tho'ra]]

Latest revision as of 18:58, 13 March 2026

Micro Fusion Fuel Cells
Micro fusion reactor core — continuous operation
Overview
TypeCompact nuclear fusion power cell
DeveloperClan Tho'ra / Earth Intelligence Network
Introduction20352038 (experimental)
StatusOperational by 2040
Physics
Primary ReactionD-T → He-4 + n (17.6 MeV)
Target Reactionp-B11 → 3 He-4 (8.7 MeV, aneutronic)
ConfinementElectrostatic (IEC) → magnetic (compact tokamak)
Plasma Temperature10–15 keV (D-T) · 300 keV (p-B11)
Lawson Product>10²¹ keV·s/m³ (D-T target)
Specifications
Power Output5–50 kW continuous (scalable)
Energy Density~10⁸ Wh/kg (fuel only)
Dimensions50 × 40 × 30 cm (prototype)
Weight40–120 kg (prototype) · <30 kg (target)
ShieldingB₄C composite (D-T) · minimal (p-B11)
CoolingLiquid lithium blanket / ceramic loop
Generation-2 power for Magneto Speeder

Micro Fusion Fuel Cells (μ-Fusion Cells, Microfusion Reactors) are compact, high-energy-density power sources based on controlled nuclear fusion of light nuclei. They represent the primary powerplant for the Magneto Speeder and high-demand systems at Tho'ra HQ, replacing Flash Hydrogen Fuel Cells for applications requiring sustained multi-kilowatt output.

Development progresses through two phases:

  • Phase 1 (2035–2040): Deuterium-tritium (D-T) fusion with neutron shielding
  • Phase 2 (2040+): Aneutronic proton-boron-11 (p-B11) with direct energy conversion

Nuclear Fusion Fundamentals

Fusion Reactions

The key reactions in the micro fusion development pathway:

Deuterium-Tritium (Phase 1):

Deuterium-Helium-3 (Intermediate):

Proton-Boron-11 (Phase 2, target):

Fusion Reaction Comparison
Reaction Q-value (MeV) Optimal T (keV) (cm³/s) Neutrons? Fuel Source
D-T 17.6 13.6 8.5 × 10⁻¹⁶ Yes (14.1 MeV) Seawater + Li breeding
D-He3 18.3 58 2.6 × 10⁻¹⁶ Minimal (side) He-3 rare (lunar regolith)
D-D 3.65 15 1.8 × 10⁻¹⁷ Partial Seawater
p-B11 8.7 148 4.6 × 10⁻¹⁶ No* Seawater + minerals
*p-B11 produces < 1% neutrons via side channels, manageable with thin B₄C shielding

Fusion Cross-Sections

The fusion cross-section determines reaction probability at a given energy. For D-T, the Gamow peak formulation: [1]

where:

  • is the astrophysical S-factor (encodes nuclear physics)
  • is the Gamow energy
  • is the fine structure constant
  • is the reduced mass

For D-T: ,

The thermal reactivity (Maxwellian-averaged):

The Lawson Criterion

For a self-sustaining fusion plasma, the triple product must exceed: [2]

where is ion density, is temperature, and is energy confinement time.

For D-T at optimum temperature (~14 keV):

or equivalently:

For p-B11, the requirement is ~500× more demanding:

This is why p-B11 is the target reaction — it requires significant advances in confinement beyond what D-T demands.

Fusion Power Density

The volumetric power output of a 50:50 D-T plasma:

At , :

A micro-fusion cell with just 10 cm³ of plasma at this density produces ~60 W of fusion power. Scaling to 1 L of plasma yields 6 kW — within the target range for Magneto Speeder applications.

Confinement Approaches

Phase 1: Inertial Electrostatic Confinement (IEC)

Early prototypes use a modified Polywell / Farnsworth-Hirsch fusor geometry: [3]

  • Geometry: Polyhedral magnetic cusp with electrostatic well
  • Confinement: Ions electrostatically focused to central convergence zone
  • Advantage: Simple construction, no massive magnet systems
  • Limitation: Ion-ion thermalization limits net gain (Rider critique)
  • Mitigation: Pulsed operation with high-voltage staging

Phase 2: Compact Tokamak / Spherical Torus

Mature units transition to high-field compact tokamak design inspired by MIT's SPARC/ARC architecture: [4]

  • Magnets: High-temperature superconducting (HTS) REBCO tape at 20+ T
  • Plasma radius: ~15–25 cm (micro scale)
  • Aspect ratio: ~1.6 (spherical torus geometry for improved stability)
  • Bootstrap current fraction: >50% (reduced external drive needs)

The high-field approach enables dramatic size reduction:

Doubling field strength from 5T to 20T increases achievable density by 16×, enabling fusion-relevant conditions in a desk-sized device.

Direct Energy Conversion

For p-B11 (Phase 2), the charged alpha products enable direct electric conversion without a thermal cycle:

Practical target: >70% conversion efficiency via:

  • Traveling-wave direct converter: Decelerating alphas in RF field → AC electricity
  • Venetian-blind collector: Electrostatic deceleration → DC electricity
  • Advantage: No steam turbine, no coolant loop, no Carnot limit

Compare to thermal conversion of D-T (limited by Carnot):

Failed to parse (syntax error): {\displaystyle \eta_{\text{Carnot}} = 1 - \frac{T_{\text{cold}}}{T_{\text{hot}}} \approx 1 - \frac{600}{5000} \approx 88\% \text{ (theoretical max, practical ~40%)}}

Fuel Supply

Deuterium: Abundant in seawater at 33 mg/L. The world's oceans contain ~10¹³ tonnes — sufficient for billions of years at projected consumption.

Tritium: Bred from lithium blanket:

Boron-11: 80% of natural boron. Global reserves: >1 billion tonnes (Turkey alone: ~70% of world supply).

Radiation & Shielding

D-T Phase

The 14.1 MeV neutron requires shielding. Boron carbide (B₄C) is the primary moderator:

where is the macroscopic total cross-section. For B₄C at 14 MeV: , giving a half-value layer of ~5.8 cm.

A 15 cm B₄C shell reduces neutron flux by:

Additional reduction achieved via lithium-6 enriched liner (captures thermalized neutrons and breeds tritium simultaneously).

p-B11 Phase

Aneutronic: primary products are charged alphas. Residual neutron production from side reactions (<1%) requires only thin B₄C liner (~2 cm). Total shielding mass drops from ~50 kg (D-T) to ~5 kg (p-B11).

Development Timeline

Micro Fusion Development Milestones
Year Milestone Configuration
2035 First sustained D-T plasma in IEC prototype Polywell, Q < 1
2037 Net energy gain achieved (Q > 1) IEC with staged acceleration
2038 First integration into Magneto Speeder 5 kW continuous, 45 kg
2039 Compact tokamak prototype HTS magnets, 20T
2040 Operational D-T cells at 50 kW Fleet deployment
2042 First p-B11 demonstration Laser-assisted ignition
2044 Aneutronic cells operational Direct conversion, <30 kg

See Also

References

  1. Bosch, H.-S. & Hale, G.M. (1992). "Improved formulas for fusion cross-sections and thermal reactivities." Nucl. Fusion 32(4), 611–631.
  2. Lawson, J.D. (1957). "Some Criteria for a Power Producing Thermonuclear Reactor." Proc. Phys. Soc. B 70(1), 6–10.
  3. Rider, T.H. (1995). "A general critique of inertial-electrostatic confinement fusion systems." Phys. Plasmas 2(6), 1853–1872.
  4. Creely, A.J. et al. (2020). "Overview of the SPARC tokamak." J. Plasma Phys. 86(5), 865860502.