In today's podcast, we're going to look at boron and nuclear fusion. Is boron the key to unlocking energy via nuclear fusion?
For the past 80 years, scientists have been exploring ways to capture energy, to provide an inexhaustible supply of quasi- free green energy.
Welcome back to the Borates Today podcast.
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Brendan:Who are the key players in the sector?
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Brendan:What is the science behind boron and who's doing valuable research into
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Brendan:In today's podcast, we're going to look at boron and nuclear fusion.
Brendan:I s boron the key to unlocking energy via nuclear fusion?
Brendan:For the past 80 years, scientists have been exploring ways to capture
Brendan:energy, to provide an inexhaustible supply of quasi- free green energy.
Brendan:Boron via laser technologies may finally provide a key to moving beyond
Brendan:the laboratory to commercialization.
Brendan:Boron and Nuclear Fusion
Brendan:The production of large scale, sustainable energy by nuclear fusion of hydrogen
Brendan:and other very light nuclei, similar to the energy source of the galaxy is a
Brendan:kind of holy grail for many scientists involved in research in energy.
Brendan:60 years of worldwide research for the ignition of the heavy hydrogen isotopes
Brendan:deuterium and tritium have provided near breakthroughs for ignition.
Brendan:However, this DT fusion research produces radioactive waste.
Brendan:There is, seemingly, an alternative with a clean fusion process without
Brendan:neutron production in the fusion of hydrogen with the boron isotope B11.
Brendan:Boron 11 plays a vital role in creating the conditions necessary to
Brendan:release energy in fusion experiments.
Brendan:Today we look at three research projects, which show different approaches to using
Brendan:boron in the quest for nuclear fusion.
Brendan:Fusing Protons and Boron 11 Nuclei Using Lasers.
Brendan:In 2013 physicists at the CNRS laboratory succeeded in producing fusion at an
Brendan:accelerated rate in the laboratory led by Christine Labaune, the research
Brendan:director of the CNRS laboratory for the use of intense lasers in France.
Brendan:Previous laser experiments generated ron fusion by aiming the laser at a
Brendan:boron target to initiate the reaction.
Brendan:This provided low levels of energy but the infrastructure needed to provide that
Brendan:energy meant that any commercialization would require more energy to create
Brendan:the energy than that produced.
Brendan:Labaune claims the laser generator, proton beam in her setup produces
Brendan:a tenfold increase of boron fusion because protons and boron nuclei
Brendan:are smashed together directly.
Brendan:The two layer system fuses protons and boron 11 nucleii.
Brendan:One laser creates a shortlived plasma, or highly ionized gas of boron nuclei.
Brendan:by heating boron atoms.
Brendan:The other laser generates a beam of protons that smash into the
Brendan:boron nuclei releasing slow moving helium particles, but no neutrons.
Brendan:The researchers describe their work in nature communications today.
Brendan:Lasers have previously been used to crush a tiny pellet of two hydrogen isotopes
Brendan:deteriorium and tritium containing two and three neutrons, respectively
Brendan:to the point of initiating fusion.
Brendan:But in addition to producing neutron ,radiation crushing the
Brendan:pellets evenly for the reaction requires a large array of lasers.
Brendan:There are nearly 200 at the world's largest laser facility,
Brendan:the national ignition facility at the Lawrence Livermore National
Brendan:Laboratory in California.
Brendan:If the boron infusion method was successfully scaled up, and I quote,
Brendan:"We expect that it will reduce significantly the total
Brendan:laser energy" says Labaune
Brendan:"Timing was crucial for the success of the experiment", says study co-author
Brendan:Johan Rafelski, a theoretical physicist at the University of Arizona in Tucson.
Brendan:The boron plasma generated by the laser lasts only about 1 billionth of a second.
Brendan:And so the pulse of protons, which lasts 1 trillionth of a second
Brendan:must be precisely synchronized to slam into the boron target.
Brendan:The proton beam is preceded by a beam of electrons generated by the same
Brendan:laser that pushes away electrons in the boron plasma, allowing the protons
Brendan:more of a chance to collide with the boron nuclei and initiate fusion.
Brendan:H B 11 fusion for a reactor may be used instead of the DT option.
Brendan:Several key research studies summarized below show how scientists
Brendan:are making significant progress in accelerating the ability to harness
Brendan:power through hydrogen boron fusion.
Brendan:In a study in 2017 into laser beam ignition of boron hydrogen fusion,
Brendan:the roadmap to clean energy using laser beam ignition of boron hydrogen
Brendan:fusion follows the following process.
Brendan:Acceleration of a plasma block where the laser beam with the power and
Brendan:time duration of the order of 10 petal watts and one picosecond accordingly.
Brendan:a plasma confinement by magnetic field of the order of a few kiloteslas
Brendan:created by a second laser beam with a pulse generator, with a pulse
Brendan:duration of a few nanoseconds.
Brendan:The highly increased fusion of HB 11 relative to present DT fusion
Brendan:is possible due to the alphas avalanche created in this process.
Brendan:The conversion of the output charged alpha particles directly to electricity.
Brendan:To prove the above ideas simulations in the lab show that 14 milligrams of HB11
Brendan:can produce 300 kilowatt hours of energy if all achieved results are combined
Brendan:for the design of an absolutely clean power reactor producing low cost energy.
Brendan:Let's have a look at generating power with boron and giant lasers.
Brendan:HB 11 energy has just raised $20 million to develop a laser fusion
Brendan:process using boron HB 11 energy.
Brendan:This Australian startup has completed groundbreaking laser equipments, which
Brendan:can potentially provide limitless electric power generation via nuclear fusion.
Brendan:The Sydney startup is working with Japanese researchers in Japan who
Brendan:give access to the petawatt class laser needed for fusion experiments.
Brendan:There are only a few lasers worldwide, which can provide this level of energy
Brendan:needed to carry out the experiment.
Brendan:HB 11 Energy's approach uses the laser beam to smash hydrogen atoms into boron
Brendan:to produce a nuclear fusion reaction.
Brendan:The resulting energy released.
Brendan:albeit in smaller amounts today, may be stabilized and converted to electricity.
Brendan:And what's more, this is a safer approach than current nuclear energy procedures.
Brendan:Traditional nuclear reactors or fission reactors, split larger elements, such
Brendan:as uranium into smaller elements.
Brendan:This releases energy together with radiation and plutonium, which
Brendan:takes a very long time to degrade.
Brendan:None of these negatives are found in the fission process, using
Brendan:laser with boron and hydrogen.
Brendan:In the case of HB 11, these smaller elements of hydrogen and an isotope
Brendan:of boron, boron11, are smashed together under extreme pressure.
Brendan:The new element formed releases energy, but any waste created has a
Brendan:very short afterlife and critically there's no radiation released.
Brendan:Professor Heinrich, Hora also involved with HB 11 energy, has been working on
Brendan:laser ignited fusion since the 1960s.
Brendan:She says the positive charge is harvested to produce electricity and helium gas,
Brendan:which makes it an ideal technology for decarbonizing the electricity grid.
Brendan:Using just 3.4 kilograms of boron the fusion process with hydrogen when
Brendan:commercialized, has the potential to meet the power needs of an
Brendan:individual for their entire lifetime.
Brendan:The boron reserves of the world's largest producer, Eti Maden, estimated
Brendan:to be over 1 billion tons could power the planet for about 3,000 years.
Brendan:,Despite the promise of a new source of safe and clean energy, research
Brendan:into fusion has been going on for decades, however, and some scientists
Brendan:still believe it is as far away from commercialization as ever.
Brendan:Dr.
Brendan:Daniela Margarone, a laser acceleration physicist at Queens university
Brendan:Belfast, who also collaborated with HB11 on its latest fusion experiment,
Brendan:describes the results as a big step forward, but not a breakthrough.
Brendan:Results of the experiment were published in January in the peer
Brendan:reviewed journal Applied Sciences.
Brendan:Dr Margarone says:
Brendan:"For the first time, a large amount of proton boron fusion reactions were
Brendan:demonstrated using a short pulse laser that can be potentially scaled up, by
Brendan:large laser fusion facilities using an approach known as fast ignition."
Brendan:There was no similar experiment done earlier so this new approach
Brendan:could open a new research field for future net energy production.
Brendan:Net energy production where the energy gathered from the ,fusion reaction is more
Brendan:than the energy required to ignite the reaction in the first place, is one of the
Brendan:stumbling blocks for the fusion industry.
Brendan:Commercializing laser facilities, which require petawatts of power, can be as
Brendan:large as a football stadium, which in itself will require more power than
Brendan:that generated from the reaction.
Brendan:The we can look at real progress to net energy gain, dr.
Brendan:McKenzie estimates, HB 11 needs to produce around 10,000 times
Brendan:more power from hydrogen boron fusion than current experiments.
Brendan:For more information on boron and nuclear fusion, please refer
Brendan:to the Borates Today website.
Brendan:And that's all for today.