How This Fusion Reactor Will Make Electricity by 2024

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Electric Future

Electric Future

Жыл бұрын

Can this new nuclear fusion generator make unlimited clean electricity?
• brilliant.org/ElectricFuture first 200 people get 20% off annual premium subscription.
• • Helion Energy Polaris:... Deeper dive into Helion's materials, methods, and fusion approach. (unlisted bonus content)
•Organizations all across the world are racing to achieve a fusion power breakthrough. Many critics say nuclear fusion is impossible, but Helion Energy believes they’ve cracked the code…
If you could design the perfect energy source, it would have an inexhaustible supply of fuel, be environmentally friendly, not take up much space, and have a high degree of safety.
The fuels considered for fusion power have traditionally all been isotopes of hydrogen, but there are better fusion reactions using elements like helium-3. Nuclear Fusion 3.0
What is nuclear fusion? Nuclear fusion explained: an experimental form of power generation that harnesses the energy released when two atoms combine.
How does nuclear fusion work? Every atom is composed of a nucleus and one or more electrons. The nucleus is made up of protons, and neutrons. A fusion reactor heats fusion fuels into plasma and fuses light elements into heavier elements.
What is plasma? If you heat atoms to high enough temperatures, they lose their electrons, forming a hot cloud of charged particles called a plasma.
What about nuclear fusion in the sun? In the core of the sun, gravity produces high pressures, compressing elements to high densities and temperatures. Perfectly extreme conditions for hydrogen to fuse into helium.
There are three key groups of fusion approaches, Magnetic fusion (ITER, Tokamak, Stellarator) Inertial confinement fusion (National Ignition Facility, Indirect drive, direct drive, lasers) and Magneto inertial fusion (Helion).
For fusion power to make commercial electricity for the power grid you need to achieve breakeven, and then net electricity gain to create a viable fusion power plant. That is real world electricity. The triple product is the key figure of merit for fusion.
Some critical components of a fusion generator are electromagnets, capacitors, first wall, and the divertor.
When does Helion expect to begin producing electricity from nuclear fusion, and how much will nuclear fusion power cost? Fusion power is projected to be one of the cheapest sources of clean zero carbon energy and electricity.
To accomplish commercial fusion power, Helion approaches production in a way that’s reminiscent of Elon Musk’s strategy for Tesla. Turning fusion power into a real world technology is going to be a long road, but people said the same thing about SpaceX. Despite the challenges, harnessing the power of the stars and offering mankind unlimited clean energy is a goal worth striving for.
•✓
•Electric Future® has no commercial relationship with Helion Energy. Helion Energy did not solicit, endorse, or approve original commentary made by Electric Future. helionenergy.com
Gentle Kisses on Both Cheeks European Style:
•iter.org
•nasa.gov/goddard
•www.iaea.org
•www.psfc.mit.edu
•www.ipp.cas.cz
•ccfe.ukaea.uk
•airliquide.com
•www.calacademy.org
•www.tesla.com
•melscience.com
•Alexander Svan - SpaceX Animation
•Alex Landress - Penn State Breazeale Reactor
•Music: LEMMiNO Aloft - • LEMMiNO - Aloft (BGM) - CC BY-SA 4.0

Пікірлер: 8 000
@Muonium1
@Muonium1 Жыл бұрын
I've been an engineer on one of the biggest laser driven inertial confinement fusion reactors for a couple decades now and I'll be blunt, the vast majority of fusion hype videos on the internet, or anywhere really, are hot garbage not at all worth my time. This video really impressed me though, both in its accuracy and detail, and its relative thoroughness in examination of the RFC scheme for magnetically confined fusion. The sources and citations are quality 👌. Compliments do not come easily or frequently from me, but this video does deserve them. I will subscribe in hopes that the current rigorous heavy science focus isn't lost over time in favor more lazy clickbait trash as I've seen so many other channels unfortunately fall prey to.
@thetruthserum2816
@thetruthserum2816 Жыл бұрын
Once humans master fusion, we can fire up the desalination and carbon sequestration factories and save our planet from the current 420ppm global CO2 in the atmosphere (2ppm annual increase), and then remove tons of Carbonic Acid that is being dissolved into the oceans... Geoengineering will have to be done to reverse the avalanche of ecosystem feedback loops that we are seeing amplify one another...
@jeebusk
@jeebusk Жыл бұрын
You should maintain a list of what's worth watching...
@oldmanspooky6641
@oldmanspooky6641 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for comment.
@brucestewart3170
@brucestewart3170 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, looks good. They should have a useful fusion reactor in "20 years".
@rexscipio3344
@rexscipio3344 Жыл бұрын
Who do you think you are? Arrogant jack ass. Your approval is nothing.
@holz_name
@holz_name 2 ай бұрын
It's 2024. Where is my free electricity????
@martintekula
@martintekula 2 ай бұрын
its only april theyre building it not to your house but to research commercial use
@nameredacted6221
@nameredacted6221 2 ай бұрын
I’m so sorry that your only comments are people who don’t get the satire
@jaye1967
@jaye1967 2 ай бұрын
It depends on you playing the correct city builder video game.
@neo-YoutubeStoleMyHandle
@neo-YoutubeStoleMyHandle 2 ай бұрын
Yup...it's 2024 so where's the fusion reactor???
@robuu5890
@robuu5890 2 ай бұрын
lol government is still gonna charge you for it
@cat22_a1
@cat22_a1 2 ай бұрын
It's 2024, I'm still waiting... Practical fusion and a commercial fusion electrical generation plant is always 30-50 years away.
@WilliamLi-nd4lz
@WilliamLi-nd4lz Ай бұрын
Give me a decade
@aldrinspeck2724
@aldrinspeck2724 2 ай бұрын
2024 has come. so?
@SamStoddart-hy3xu
@SamStoddart-hy3xu 2 ай бұрын
Your 2 months late
@Lucifurion
@Lucifurion Ай бұрын
YOU’RE
@nickbroughton928
@nickbroughton928 Ай бұрын
"By" 2024 k so, where's it at?
@deanle604
@deanle604 Ай бұрын
Ooop 2042 mistyped
@aldrinspeck2724
@aldrinspeck2724 Ай бұрын
always 20 years away.....
@MrKgBizzle
@MrKgBizzle Жыл бұрын
“The potential is enormous” Love the wordplay.
@ThePaulv12
@ThePaulv12 Жыл бұрын
I'm almost completely but not quite cynical when it comes to fusion that I invariably ban channels talking about fusion especially ones that invoke the words 'breakthrough' and 'milestone.' Those channels immediately get the 'Do not recommend' treatment. This channel was almost one of those but after fast forwarding through the first 3 or 4 mins I'm glad I watched. I was expecting sensational platitudes, lies, damn lies, outrageously ambitious timelines, clickbait etc; however none were forthcoming. How refreshing! My reward? Facts, a potential solution to the helium 3 problem and a plain admission that "turning fusion power into a cost effective real world technology is going to be a long road." Interesting. It was a good vid this one.
@nolimitarcade2865
@nolimitarcade2865 Жыл бұрын
For far more than a half of a century, the "Fusion Theory" has made it's proponents very wealthy, those proponents include the Oil Industry that want to extend the market life of THEIR product, dirty fossil fuels. See.THORIUM
@gregmarsters2434
@gregmarsters2434 7 ай бұрын
Fusion research has to sound like success is just around the corner. That is how they fund their toys and careers.
@elmarmoelzer2229
@elmarmoelzer2229 7 ай бұрын
They are fully funded actually and their investors have been on the board since the company got started. They also had their results peer reviewed by reviewers brought in from the big national labs. And they are aiming for net electricity some time around the end of 2024
@JongJande
@JongJande 6 ай бұрын
This is very sound approach for various reasons. Small scale, pulsed heat generation and electricy generation via plasma and not via steam or hot gas, relatively simple to modify and optimise. Hats off !!!!
@5133937
@5133937 Жыл бұрын
Helion’s design is a first in more ways than one. Besides fusion itself, the most interesting aspect is that unlike all other fossil fuel and nuclear electricity-generating schemes, it doesn’t work by heating up water into steam which then turns a turbine to generate electricity. Instead electricity is created directly by manipulating the plasma’s magnetic field to drive a current through wires. That’s amazing. It’s way past time humanity moved beyond steam-powered turbines.
@alansmithee419
@alansmithee419 Жыл бұрын
Well... It only really works with this type of fusion. There's nothing wrong with turbines, other than when they're applied to this type of fusion reactor (or solar, which wouldn't make any sense at all). Yes it's inefficient, but that almost always doesn't stop it from being the most efficient option available.
@unadultratedtrini
@unadultratedtrini Жыл бұрын
It could have been feasibly done with fision as well but no one put r&d or budget into figuring it out or we could have been much closer to fusion. The extraction, not generation is the true engineering marvel. Theoretically it's very much possible to take current from a magnetic field, this is done in transformers already, but to control a plasma such that we could extract energy from it is where we are missing out. Again if this is figured out then the rest of fusion is a cake walk because most of the tech required to extract the energy from magnetic fields could be reversed to stabilize the reaction in the first place. Then it's a matter of modulation until you are taking out more than you are putting in to keep the reaction stable.
@alansmithee419
@alansmithee419 Жыл бұрын
@@unadultratedtrini This only works because this type of fusion is aneutronic, and because it's done by pulses, rather than being a stellerator/tokamak etc (where constant reactions are taking place). This cannot be used for most fusion methods or indeed fission reactors (which don't even have plasma). The reason this energy extraction method hadn't been invented before this type of fusion research is because it would have been completely useless.
@MsDragonbal776
@MsDragonbal776 Жыл бұрын
I've said the same. I did a deep dive into these things once only to realize that they're nothing more than modern steam generators. Imagine my dissapointment
@rhamlet5290
@rhamlet5290 Жыл бұрын
Why is it time for us to move on from steam? A steam-based reactor would have a LOT of advantages: 1. It could be a drop in replace, assuming it could work at small enough scales, at coal power plants and many gas power plants. 2. It would allow district heating using waste steam at those plants (there are trillions of dollars sunk in this alone). 3. Steam acts as a massive buffer. One of the problems with solar and wind is that there is no inertia to the system. If I plug in my car, and my neighbor turns on the stove, we might add 15 kW to the grid, but people are doing things like that every second. That inertia helps balance the power in and the power out. If there is no such inertia, we need more grid storage or very fast acting peaker plants. That is expensive. The plus side is that if this works reasonably fast, it doesn't have to be base load, something fission is mostly limited to. 4. In general, water moderates things very well. Any random issues are dragged out. If suddenly you can't put in more fusion material, you'd still have a hot power generator that could keep on pumping as other systems ramp up. Of course, this can also be a negative. Shutting down fission reactors takes days, and those can be very stressful days if there is, say, a war next to your reactor. 5. Steam can be used to distill water, among other things. Steam is so common because it is so good.
@craigmuranaka8016
@craigmuranaka8016 Жыл бұрын
Love that Helton plans to generate electricity without boiling water to make steam to turn turbines. I’m rooting for Helion. I even love how they’re solving the helium 3 issue.
@danmiller2177
@danmiller2177 Жыл бұрын
Do you know how much helium 3 gas cost? This is pipe dream.... The materals would last very long in very high 🔥.....
@OldManShoutsAtClouds
@OldManShoutsAtClouds Жыл бұрын
​@@danmiller2177 they're literally bottling the power of a star and all you can offer is complaints about the fuel source 🤣
@danmiller2177
@danmiller2177 Жыл бұрын
@@OldManShoutsAtClouds good luck with that dream.....
@danmiller2177
@danmiller2177 Жыл бұрын
@@OldManShoutsAtClouds do u know how much helium3 cost?
@alanmalcheski8882
@alanmalcheski8882 Жыл бұрын
@@danmiller2177 one hundred... billion... dollars...?
@pratikdagu
@pratikdagu 9 ай бұрын
Great video!! I liked that you took one company and then expanded on the issue! Focused and precise!✌🏻
@user-mv2gf3uh9p
@user-mv2gf3uh9p 4 ай бұрын
Its 2024… is it doing the thing yet?
@AndreasAM2882
@AndreasAM2882 2 ай бұрын
No, there still a long way to go lol
@lomgshorts3
@lomgshorts3 Жыл бұрын
Solution: Thorium based low pressure molten salt reactor. Thorium is cheap, found everywhere, and can run on a low pressure modular constructed molten florium salt reactor producing gigawatts of power in our electricity starved Nation. Its modular construction is very affordable, can be trucked to its picked site, doesn't need a water source because it is cooled by thermal conduction under the surface of the surrounding Earth under the surface at about 50' the temperatures are ideally at 56-58°F. Actual fusion power is generations away, battery technology is still in its infancy, solar is inefficient due to its low conversion factor and really takes up too much landmass and is affected by weather. Wind is the same way, with the same problems as solar, and it kills rare bird species. So, we are left with Molten Salt Thorium based nuclear reactors which are at least 100 times safer than fast breeder reactors because if they lose power for cooling, a plug in the system melts and the radioactive solution falls into sub critical vats and cools itself. Also, cost and construction times are reduced to 18 months instead of 5+ years or more for the high pressure fast breeder plant that has shown to be so dangerous in the recent past. Need I mention Three Mile Island, Chernobyl, and the four Daichi plants in Japan? Our government built a molten salt thorium plant 50+ years ago and it operated without fault for five years, they shut it down because, while it produced lots of power for its size, it didn't produce bomb quality plutonium which we have far too much of that now and do not need it. Thorium reactors produce radioactive waste that only is dangerous for only 300 years instead of thousands of years for uranium 235 and plutonium. Thorium is a win-win technology for a power starved Nation.
@mtp123fly
@mtp123fly Жыл бұрын
Thorium has been on hold for about 20 years waiting for someone to donate $10B so they can build one and show that it really works. You are correct that the design of current reactors was driven by needing to make bombs.
@joeblogs6598
@joeblogs6598 Жыл бұрын
@bhakta_joe @longshorts3 The problem that nuclear power has is that it solves the energy crisis. Without the panic and fear that a crisis brings, those who want to control us will find it much harder to do so!
@joeblogs6598
@joeblogs6598 Жыл бұрын
just noticed there's 7 replies here but only 4 comments... youtube shadow-deleting again!
@gianni_schicchi
@gianni_schicchi Жыл бұрын
An online troll doing master in Pys. was calling me dumb for being skeptical about fusion and saying exactly this, ‘why aren’t we just building molten salt reactors anyway’. is it just me, or are a lot of issues glossed over here. The energy required to mine He3 from space, or fuse it on Earth, the energy to create the heat, thermodynamic losses in their heat recapture system (they didn’t even mention what that is exactly, a turbine?). I don’t get how you get around conservation of energy without gravity doing the “free work” of creating pressure/heat. I also find it funny that mining He3 from the Moon would just be solar energy with more steps.
@jasonroberts2049
@jasonroberts2049 11 ай бұрын
We could just stop abusing energy all together.....
@thomascoolidge2161
@thomascoolidge2161 Жыл бұрын
Finally… a fusion video that actually explains how they intend to get power out of the fusion reaction. Thank you!
@chuckholmes2075
@chuckholmes2075 Жыл бұрын
absolutely... ask yourself why are we going to the moon? Nasa and Gov are lying to you. it's been 50 years and all of a sudden... there's been a huge breakthrough and H3 is the key. however H3 is very rare on earth but very abundant on a planet/moon with no atmosphere. the Artermis project is about mining H3 from the moon. it's very HUSH HUSH
@thierrymartin997
@thierrymartin997 Жыл бұрын
This is good for teenagers willing to choose research in their future. Because I m afraid the fusion with Tokamak is only for studying the problems with this method to create fusions reactions. In fact this the bad method to create fusion because this is continuous process and not pulse mode process like Gaz engine. Tokamak is the steam engine to produce energy. So far JET needs 600MW to produce less than 60MW useful energy from fusion . The problem is the disruptions. Whatever we try to avoid them is the electronic cloud collected par of energy from DT reactions of nuclear fusion. With time the cloud is growing. Eventually it will touch the wall making short circuit of the huge courant coils. The B field is for positive changes. . The second solutions is to compress a ice pellet of two gases . The Idea in to reduce the size of the pellet by a factor 1000 time in a very short time of 100 nano seconds. The heat will have to reach 1 billions degrees in this short pulse. The result is eventually to make aneutronic fusion , no neutron emission. This is pure X ray generator easy to convert in electricity without turbine like in Nuclear power plant. So far it is say the top country are reaching 10 billions degrees Celsius. This is a technology is attractive because the electrons have no time to pump par of the fusion reaction. Directly photons emissions. Because aneutronic fusion creates no radiation but enormous energy which can be use to build either clean nuclear nukes o space reactor munch faster than chemical reactor .or electrical plants So far Bborum proton fusion reaction making 3 helium atoms and lot of X-ray is possible but not in continuity process like gas engine. The problem is to build the enormous heat done by lasers. But the lasers in lab can produce Gigawatts now. Of course still under military control. ITER the Tokamak for continuous fusion reactor is unfortunately a dead project with enormous challenges which will end this approach of making energy. . Of course the solutions to resolve ITER problems will help to improve other fields than fusion technology. this was a political project after the end of cold war. But the inertial method to produce controlled fusion reaction should become soon the best. Thanks to the Nobium lasers which are enabled to compress the matter to generate Fusion. In fact tokamak research was good to study the fusion reaction
@stuckonaslide
@stuckonaslide Жыл бұрын
all the other fusion videos are "fusion is the solution to all of our problems. i will not explain anything but its magic or something i think"
@johnhearn4622
@johnhearn4622 Жыл бұрын
Amen!
@michaeldavison9808
@michaeldavison9808 Жыл бұрын
@@thierrymartin997 Just because research fusion reactors will never achieve Q=1 doesn't mean that this bunch of people have a magic solution. This sounded to me like a glossy brochure trying to get venture capital for a small company with an unproven idea. Let's just say I'd like my research money to go towards improving the current generation of almost energy neutral experiments.
@Zocht-Kocht
@Zocht-Kocht 9 ай бұрын
Love the intro: "Hey, are you the guy building fusion reactors?"
@antonnym214
@antonnym214 5 ай бұрын
Okay. It's 2024, can we get an update?
@nathanc6443
@nathanc6443 2 ай бұрын
Yes
@jbreward4035
@jbreward4035 2 ай бұрын
By the way, we need fusion before we destroy this planet with fossil fuels it’s 2024 man let’s go
@PolywellFan4512
@PolywellFan4512 Жыл бұрын
There are several innovations here. The reaction is unique for the fusion industry (but difficult to hit temperature); the conversion method is unique (though Lockheed explored this approach). The use of fused silica in a fusion reactor is innovative. We have only seen a few teams use glass inside their reactors; Sam Cohen's team at Princeton is one example. Glass is an electrical insulator; which reduces conduction losses out of the plasma. Almost all fusion reactor vacuum chambers have to be made using metal walls because of vacuum conditions; but the issue is that the metal conducts the plasma away; leading to large losses of energy.
@alandinham7568
@alandinham7568 Жыл бұрын
Seems to me the hard part is done
@alexzanderroberts995
@alexzanderroberts995 Жыл бұрын
Isn't fused silica glass? I thought glass was made from silica
@sicksock435446
@sicksock435446 10 ай бұрын
The reason most fusion projects discarded Deuterium-Helium3 and pursued Deuterium-Tritium fusion is due to the frankly insane energy disparity. For reference a D-H3 fusion reaction produces 50 times less power than a D-T fusion at 300 million C, the ideal temperature of most fusion test reactors. That gap closes slightly if you increase density and temperature beyond that point, but that only creates greater engineering problems, for marginal gains. Helions approach is much more disadvantaged compared to other fusion projects, not only due to their fuel, but their (relatively) extremely low target temperature. At only 100 million C their proposed fuel mix is 1000 times less reactive then a D-T mixture.
@jml4798
@jml4798 Жыл бұрын
I work for a company that builds the capacitors that help them achieve this! It's pretty cool
@eholland77
@eholland77 Жыл бұрын
Have helion
@jml4798
@jml4798 Жыл бұрын
@@eholland77 No
@fufuandyam
@fufuandyam Жыл бұрын
What company do you work for?
@jns185
@jns185 Жыл бұрын
"sell shovels when there's a gold rush" -- I'm also curious, what company is that? 😁
@charlesnelson5187
@charlesnelson5187 Жыл бұрын
Achieve 'what' exactly?
@takingbacktheplanet
@takingbacktheplanet 10 ай бұрын
pretty cool. watched quite a few videos on the topic generally, but on this startup specifically and it explained what they're doing pretty well. :sip: thanks
@fjeinca
@fjeinca 11 ай бұрын
I applaud the efforts to simplify this here, although I missed hearing the narration note that deuterium is actually an isotope (with doubled nuclei) aka “heavy hydrogen”. Many labels are flawed but at least that’s familiar to us in the last century.
@johanschoeman869
@johanschoeman869 Жыл бұрын
I am so impressed with the concept Helion is exploiting. I am not a scientist but from what i as a novice could glean they seem to be a front runner in getting to the all important ignition and commercial viability. I wish them well in this quest and wish them great rewards both financially and spiritually for their industriousness and dedication.
@elmarmoelzer2229
@elmarmoelzer2229 Жыл бұрын
Helion actually does not have to achieve ignition (as in the fusion products keep the plasma hot without external heating) for their machine to work. This is because they can directly recover so much of the input energy (95%) that the fusion energy only has to make up for the remaining 5% for it to be self sustaining. For a power plant, you will want to have additional electricity to sell of course. So you need more fusion than just to make up the 5% loss. But the system should be efficient enough for ignition to not be needed.
@supernoodles908
@supernoodles908 4 ай бұрын
​@@elmarmoelzer2229another issue is where the heck is the shielding for it....
@ShneekeyTheLost
@ShneekeyTheLost Жыл бұрын
So let me get this right... to create a fusion reactor, you basically created two coil gun plasma throwers and aimed them at each other? Awesome!
@OffTheBeatenPath_
@OffTheBeatenPath_ Жыл бұрын
I need a plasma rifle in a 60 watt range
@manuell3505
@manuell3505 Жыл бұрын
I don't think anything that can hold or transport plasma exists. It's hotter than all known solid materials.
@ShneekeyTheLost
@ShneekeyTheLost Жыл бұрын
@@manuell3505 Then you should probably educate yourself, because we do it all the time. Heck, the fluorescent tubes you find in all the office buildings is technically exciting molecules into a plasma state to give off light. You can make a form of plasma in your microwave with grape seeds, and contain it with a glass. Also, you don't seem to understand the concept of what a melting point is if you try to claim that Plasma is hotter than all known solid materials. If you are trying to say that the plasma state is hotter than the solid state of any given material, that's a given considering the very definition of the states of matter. If you're trying to say that there are no solid objects hotter than any form of plasma, you're simply incorrect in that. Some substances do have melting points higher than the temperature of some plasma. You're also grossly incorrect in our inability to contain plasma even if it is that hot, such as found in modern tokamak fusion reactors that have yet to reach power neutrality. You use electromagnetic fields to contain the plasma. This is something we've been doing for decades now.
@afz902k
@afz902k Жыл бұрын
Did you watch the video? They hold it with strong magnetic fields, because plasma particles are charged. The walls of the enclosure have to be pretty heat resistant though, despite being physically not in contact with the plasma.
@frostriver4547
@frostriver4547 Жыл бұрын
@@afz902k what could go wrong? Totally safe and effective I’m sure
@JordanBurrill-db2fx
@JordanBurrill-db2fx Жыл бұрын
I've been wondering if a set of fusion reactors, operating in sequence, like a gasoline engine. This would solve the problem of recharging a single reaction environment.
@rd6416
@rd6416 2 ай бұрын
Ok Its now April 2024. Is it making power yet?
@lockwoodthexton
@lockwoodthexton Жыл бұрын
I actually feel smarter after watching this video, which is a rare and wonderful thing.
@stephanygates6491
@stephanygates6491 Жыл бұрын
I love that they named the “early fusion power pinch device” at Los Alamos the Perhapsatron. I’ve been waiting for fusion since the first nuclear reactors were built in my childhood. This was such a wonderfully informative presentation.
@alanmalcheski8882
@alanmalcheski8882 Жыл бұрын
what do you think of the LDX at MIT?
@alanmalcheski8882
@alanmalcheski8882 Жыл бұрын
... and LCF... lattice confinement.
@Localtoast05
@Localtoast05 Жыл бұрын
Based on my knowledge, I don’t actually think we are gonna end up with fusion power on a huge scale any time soon, but there is still hope. Look at our progress with tech in the last 20 years, that’s a short time to go from such low tech to a future we couldn’t imagine long ago. I may not know much about technology and engineering, but I sure do love learning about it!
@dinamiteurdinamiteur2324
@dinamiteurdinamiteur2324 7 ай бұрын
No they will end to sell fossil fuels before as mush as they can. Also in what stoxks should i invest to invest in nuclear fusion ? What are the best ones right now
@user-yi7zm3qk3i
@user-yi7zm3qk3i 2 ай бұрын
​@@dinamiteurdinamiteur2324 erm no.
@keldonator
@keldonator 2 ай бұрын
It's 2024, no fusion power
@Lucifurion
@Lucifurion Ай бұрын
It’s not even halfway through 2024 yet Cletus. Show us all where they said “by January 1st”? By 2024 means on any one of the 366 days this year.
@keldonator
@keldonator Ай бұрын
@@Lucifurion I'll check back in 2025
@burnburn645
@burnburn645 27 күн бұрын
@@keldonator hello i came back from 2026 and i have the privilege of informing you that finally we have come to the conclusion that @lucifurion is a dumbass. also no fusion plant cus duh.
@senselocke
@senselocke Жыл бұрын
I have to give you props for your editing, effects, animations, and explanations. This could easily devolve into little more than a promotional video, but you framed it in a much more narratively interesting way, so instead of being "sold" on an idea, the viewer is learning new concepts and following along on a developing story and journey. And you're skilled enough to render complicated processes into simple, effective descriptions, and the animations are clear, simple, and coordinated with the descriptions in such a way that they add clarity and support. I was expecting to find out a neat thing or two; instead I now want to share this with a few friends because it's just bloody cool. Really, really well-made video! =)
@ElectricFuture
@ElectricFuture Жыл бұрын
appreciated
@michaelquisutdeus2970
@michaelquisutdeus2970 Жыл бұрын
Agreed. This is an excellent appraisal of the video. Not only is this project fascinating in itself, but the way it's all presented makes it more than the sum of it's parts.
@fathertoson8025
@fathertoson8025 Жыл бұрын
Am impressed
@railgap
@railgap 7 ай бұрын
IT IS little more than a promotional video.
@bartcop2742
@bartcop2742 6 ай бұрын
What a butt kisser
@adamross2256
@adamross2256 Жыл бұрын
Some thoughts: Fantastic video. As others have mentioned, this is the first time I've heard of anyone coming up with a method to harness electricity directly from the fusion process. Most talk of fusion leaves that part out. The explanation and visuals are fantastic for detailing how the various fusion methods function. Its technical enough to be accurate, but is still accessible. And finally: If you turn their quartz injection chamber on its side, and sub out the pink light for blue.......... wouldn't we see that on the Enterprise-D? :O
@sedeen5322
@sedeen5322 2 ай бұрын
Um so where is it now
@joeboxter3635
@joeboxter3635 Ай бұрын
Uhm, where it's always been? Twenty years away.
@bret9741
@bret9741 5 ай бұрын
I’ve been hearing the same “we’ll be producing cheap affordable fusion power plants within 5 years”. Or “amazing break through, a game changer”. So far we have spent hundreds of billions on this with absolutely ZERO affordable energy produced. I doubt we’ll see this energy viable or affordable in the next 50 years.
@elmarmoelzer2229
@elmarmoelzer2229 5 ай бұрын
Not even close to hundreds of billions have been spent on fusion. In fact, historically, the US budget for fusion research has been too small to make any meaningful progress.
@bret9741
@bret9741 5 ай бұрын
@@elmarmoelzer2229 Since the 1950s, the U.S. has spent an estimated $20 billion on fusion research; today $700 million is included in the federal budget. Though progress in the last 70 years has been substantial, solutions to several key challenges remain stubbornly out of reach. From California Daily Globe Adjusted for inflation we’ve spent about $500 -$600billion dollars. If we ad in Europe spending it’s more than double that. Maybe you have some other numbers to specify total US spending. Regardless it’s been pretty much delivering -0- energy to date. Even with these “so called break through” it’s highly unlikely you or I will see a nation replacing power plants with Fusion plants in the next 25 years at best.
@CausticLemons7
@CausticLemons7 Жыл бұрын
Really interesting and I think your video explains more than most fusion content.
@Hensiwbey_336
@Hensiwbey_336 Жыл бұрын
This is the most exciting and concrete fusion reactor design I’ve ever seen. Specifically targeting at electricity generation, which different from so many different “breakeven” targeted design in the industry. I rarely comment on ur, but I truly hope they can achieve net goals in relatively short timeframe.
@jonb5493
@jonb5493 10 ай бұрын
Y the "charged particles out" is unique vs all the other "hot neutrons" which is less attractive. Fingers crossed!
@StillUp2Date
@StillUp2Date 17 күн бұрын
Helion Energy is like Tesla in 2006, many people don't understand the potential of this concept. 10-20 years later - 2034-2044 - they will be one of the most successful fusion companies. Most of the Helium-3 supply is on the moon, so in order to make this new fusion economy successful, one first has to develop the fastest quantum computers for generating real-time CFDs (Computational Fluid Designs), in order to calculate and simulate the trip to the moon and efficiently harvesting the fossils for the generator. On the one hand we are burning energy and money to reach the moon for this new technology - on the other hand we are opening the gate for a completely new quantum-proof economy which will generate as much extra energy as we like. Quantum Computing / CFDs - Physics/Space Travel - Chemistry/Medicine - (Laser) Fusion Generators. Those four will be the main topics for generating a quantum-proof and sustainable fusion economy.
@itmaslanka
@itmaslanka 4 ай бұрын
Dr. Salvatore Pais USN has a small fusion reactor patented . All the naval ship have some type of special reactors for power .
@imacoastaleddie
@imacoastaleddie Жыл бұрын
What I find exciting about there approach is the direct generation of power through the use of magnetic the pulse. Elegant!
@Srindal4657
@Srindal4657 Жыл бұрын
I think technology is going to move even faster when the engineering challenges have been dealt with for fusion
@MrNatmax
@MrNatmax Жыл бұрын
If this project starts to produce a large amount of net energy I can see this as both a energy source and a propulsion source for fusion rocketry, probably a High ISP Low Delta-V but a viable interstellar engine, it would need some geometry tweaks and all, but this might work for a superheated thermonuclear rocket or an only fusion torch rocket
@russelljohnson6243
@russelljohnson6243 10 ай бұрын
I found this very educational and fun to watch, thanks!
@timfenton7469
@timfenton7469 Жыл бұрын
I’m nearly 70 years old and I’ve set the goal of living long enough to see people on Mars before I kick the proverbial bucket. But if I live long enough to see viable commercial fusion generation..... well that would suffice for me.
@ElectricFuture
@ElectricFuture Жыл бұрын
I think you’ve got a damn good chance of seeing both
@shawns0762
@shawns0762 Жыл бұрын
I am 53 and have similar feelings, we will definitely see people on Mars thanks to Elon
@peteallen4287
@peteallen4287 Жыл бұрын
same age, same goal, either would also suffice for me. Incredible changes in science & technology over my lifespan-BUT really wanted to see fusion power and humans on Mars before I check out.
@alexanderpowell1528
@alexanderpowell1528 Жыл бұрын
You have no chance of seeing either. *My income doesn't depend on people believing in hyperbole, unlike everyone else here* . Oh what's that- you study such and such and are really close to developing such and such as long as you get more funding. Ha ha, yeah, just like the environmentalists requiring further funding to save the planet.
@Badkitty24
@Badkitty24 Жыл бұрын
With Musk being our salvation to leaving this war stricken planet, you may just see it.
@wuodanstrasse5631
@wuodanstrasse5631 Жыл бұрын
I received my PhD in Plasma Physics in 1963. I have been hearing about this development since the late 1950's. It was 30 years away then. It always seems to be yet another 30 years away. Just like Zero Point Energy becoming a viable energy source. I have pursued ZPE personally since the 1970's but it still seems always out of reach. Damn and double damn. Incredibly frustrating.
@miscbits6399
@miscbits6399 Жыл бұрын
The more we know about fusion and magnetic confinement the more we realise that we need to know.....
@King-a-ling
@King-a-ling Жыл бұрын
Get with me. I will show you where you are going wrong. The key thing is the transfer of energy. Think of it in terms of investing and compound interests. Yep.
@jeep-australia
@jeep-australia Жыл бұрын
Missing that key element, vibranium. 🤔
@igory8698
@igory8698 Жыл бұрын
Just like with oil that is supposed to run out in the next 30 years. When you hear it, it is a fairy tail. This is one of the ways they control us.
@McL0VINNN
@McL0VINNN Жыл бұрын
It's only 30 years away though.
@ennunez7802
@ennunez7802 Жыл бұрын
so in other words this is exactly like the spiderman movie where doc oct was trying to create the fusion reactor.. and i didnt understand the big terms but was smart enough to understand it
@youself20
@youself20 Ай бұрын
the background music used around 4:40/4:46 is "Cipher" by Lemmino for anyone searching for it
@jamesaapollock
@jamesaapollock Жыл бұрын
This… this is amazing. I didn’t think I’d see successful applications of fusion power in my lifetime. The idea that it could happen within the next 5-10 years is wildly cool
@FWtravels
@FWtravels Жыл бұрын
It’s a pipe dream. Never gonna happen. Einstein said that man will never conquer the powers of the atom. It’s all a distraction wake up sheep
@jacobprisner
@jacobprisner Жыл бұрын
Where did you hear 5 years
@poldetson6596
@poldetson6596 Жыл бұрын
It could happen in the next 5-10 years for the last 40 years. Do some research.
@billbradleymusic
@billbradleymusic Жыл бұрын
Dreamers wanted apply below.
@jamesaapollock
@jamesaapollock Жыл бұрын
@@jacobprisner in the video it’s mentioned that their reactors could be running by 2024 and generating more power than it takes to run them. Add time to build more reactors and scale manufacturing up and that’s how I guess 5-10 years
@johncipolletti5611
@johncipolletti5611 Жыл бұрын
I have been hearing about those efficient Fusion reactors finally coming on line for 30 years now!
@michaelclark4876
@michaelclark4876 Жыл бұрын
Eh, I don't know about 30 years. I've followed fusion development pretty closely and the claims of just about ready to come on line have only been in the past 10 years or so. Still we should be very suspicious of such claims. Most tech startups that rely on technologies still in development exaggerate a great deal on their timelines, so that isn't much of a surprise. At one point Virgin Galactic was saying they would be running regular commercial flights by 2014 or so. Personally I tend to at least double the claims for time needed, assuming things work out at all.
@johncipolletti5611
@johncipolletti5611 Жыл бұрын
@@michaelclark4876 I might have got the time wrong but.... You are right in exaggerating time lines in any technology. Just look at KZfaq videos with all the problems we are having with EV vehicles. They even say that ICE vehicles will disappear by 2030. So much baloney!
@michaelclark4876
@michaelclark4876 Жыл бұрын
​@@johncipolletti5611 Exactly! There is no chance that in 8 years internal combustion engines will completely disappear from all new vehicles let alone all vehicles. The optimistic boosters of a technology always have it developing faster than it does. Everything takes longer than expected. I'm a huge booster for fusion energy research and have been my whole life. I'd love for some of these predictions to come true. But lets face it, what Helion says in 2022 that it can do by 2024 is exactly what it said in 2014 would be done by 2019. In reality, net electric production with a D-He3 fuel cycle by 2030 would be an amazing triumph of lightning fast development. Would love to see it, will be shocked if I do. That being said, the people who claim fusion power will forever be 30 years away are failing to note the quickening pace of discovery over multiple approaches. I wouldn't be surprised if theoretical break even is made by or before 2030, but its a long way from there to putting power into the grid And to be fair about the timeline, 33 years ago we did have Fleischmann and Pons, though that fell through quickly.
@johncipolletti5611
@johncipolletti5611 Жыл бұрын
@@michaelclark4876 YES!
@eMPee584
@eMPee584 Жыл бұрын
@@michaelclark4876 „That being said, the people who claim fusion power will forever be 30 years away are failing to note the quickening pace of discovery over multiple approaches.“
@pierrevanrooyen5822
@pierrevanrooyen5822 Жыл бұрын
...SOOOO... THERE WOULD STILL BE A GRID WHERE CARTELLS AND MUNICIPALITIES CAN STILL MILK THE CONSUMERS???
@sharkcode1
@sharkcode1 25 күн бұрын
Absolutely amazing video. Regards from Brazil
@hardergamer
@hardergamer Жыл бұрын
This is a top video, thank you, I just hope this is shared well.
@angrybritches1854
@angrybritches1854 Жыл бұрын
Imagine a world, where governments all across the planet weren't corrupt.
@picketf
@picketf Жыл бұрын
Foucault describes in "Discipline and Punishment" how it is a natural and unavoidable concept that power corrupts. And the only way to undo a centralized power condensing construct is to actively destroy the construct into ruins whereupon something new can be built. There is no progress without destruction.
@kathleendanford9420
@kathleendanford9420 2 ай бұрын
Yes glad to see that they evolved it to smaller workable size to accure the vacuum to generate the continuous collision .
@CarniMore
@CarniMore Жыл бұрын
This is fascinating! Great video !
@derrillyager7946
@derrillyager7946 Жыл бұрын
I am encouraged to see the expansion of human knowledge. And hope the future is bright...sorry to say that the more complex systems are the more likely things can go wrong, (my experience)..but still hoping for the best. Keep up the good work.
@ZirothTech
@ZirothTech Жыл бұрын
Incredibly made video as always! Great to see more about Helium-3 fusion after learning more about the challenges of D-T fusion (although there are some interesting solutions to that which show promise). I still need to look into it more, but the initial D-D fusion to create the He3 makes more sense given the low electronvolts of the neutron it shoots off, as I know the neutrons from D-T fusion can be quite problematic! Hopefully I can get in contact with them to get into more details about their D-D to D-He3 process! Thanks for sharing.
@the_dragon_gamer8850
@the_dragon_gamer8850 Жыл бұрын
Some sources says that there are large concentrations of helium-3 on Lunar. Since we are not far from returning to moon, it might be worth a closer look. Could be a possible energy reservoir
@jayyoo906
@jayyoo906 Жыл бұрын
Plasma, how long? It is point. Stupid bla bla he tries to teach whom what.?
@michaeldavison9808
@michaeldavison9808 Жыл бұрын
@@the_dragon_gamer8850 Yes, let's pursue an energy policy that relies on a fuel that might exist in quantity on the moon. OR we could engineer a solution that uses Duterium, you know, the stuff that the sea is full of. I think option 2.
@the_dragon_gamer8850
@the_dragon_gamer8850 Жыл бұрын
@@michaeldavison9808 deuterium? My point is, if there is to be a lunar gateway station for future spacecrafts. There has to be convenient ways of having fuel ready to pump into those craft they need to travel beyond Earth encounter. Helium-3 would’ve been Nextdoor to the gateway station. For now, that option seems more plausible because we haven’t mastered fusion reaction yet. 🤷🏻‍♂️
@elmarmoelzer2229
@elmarmoelzer2229 Жыл бұрын
@@the_dragon_gamer8850 Large concentrations is relative. They are measured in parts per billion with maybe 7 parts per billion being the average. So, you have to process a billion tonnes of regolith to get 7 tonnes of He3...
@barrycohen8254
@barrycohen8254 8 ай бұрын
Moving away from a glorified steam generator to direct conversion to electricity will be a big jump to making it less costly.
@lazarusblackwell6988
@lazarusblackwell6988 Жыл бұрын
I find this interesting to watch until the end. My main field of interest is communication but im getting into technology too. I want to contribute more to society so i have to learn more and tech is one of the most beneficial sciences.
@prototype9nine613
@prototype9nine613 Жыл бұрын
I was once optimistic on this project but now it seems too good to be possible, but if you are sure you can pull it out who am I to discourage you. Go for it ,we all want free abundant energy. I imagine what we can do with this energy, for instance space travel. This is a goal worth spending time on. MAY THE FORCE BE WITH YOU
@shanearnold2854
@shanearnold2854 Жыл бұрын
Boy we're u wrong
@PETERJOHN101
@PETERJOHN101 Жыл бұрын
Free? No one said anything about free. You will always pay a premium for new (more efficient) technology. Take EVs for example. It's the Chieftains of Industry that cash in on such advances, not the consumer.
@rickpontificates3406
@rickpontificates3406 Жыл бұрын
Very professional video! If I saw this on the Discovery Channel, I would not think it was out of place.
@ElectricFuture
@ElectricFuture Жыл бұрын
Isn’t that the channel that does like my 2,000 pound wife shows? I don’t know whether to take this as a compliment or insult 😁
@shmirie666
@shmirie666 9 ай бұрын
a show from the 90s called star gate sg1 had an episode showing a large fusion reactor that used heavy water as its fuel. This seems pretty cool
@xanderjames8682
@xanderjames8682 3 ай бұрын
"Ya blow up one sun and people expect you to walk on water" -major carter
@jamesbond_007
@jamesbond_007 Ай бұрын
This video discusses what other Helion based videos do not: a) their process is aneutronic, and b) why being aneutronic is so important, not only for limiting the neutron-caused degradation of the container walls and making them radioactive, but that there is substantially more energy available with aneutronic fusion. Very exciting stuff!!!
@manuelmorales6084
@manuelmorales6084 Жыл бұрын
I agree that this new type of fusion reactor is much closer to viability that the previous methods. This magnetic vortex has a real chance at success. We may be looking at a long awaited upgrade to our energy needs. Unlimited energy is the dream, here we have a renewed hope. Keeping my fingers crossed.
@alanmalcheski8882
@alanmalcheski8882 Жыл бұрын
I have seen things like this in my mind for 30 years. Why would this take so long to make? And after finding these and thinking they're awesome I found out about LCF, using simple equipment like vacuum tubes, they can do better, more dense fusion than these ever could. And that was invented by mistake 70 years ago. And I was never too smart to begin with. So.... ..... ... wtf
@alanmalcheski8882
@alanmalcheski8882 Жыл бұрын
there's something like this at the lab... Fermi labs I think, or a college... It's a levitating dipole reactor that is 12-15ft across. That can do this, and it's old. They say it's a novel reactor. Not functional. It's functional. You don't keep a thing that big sitting in your lab as a curio.
@alanmalcheski8882
@alanmalcheski8882 Жыл бұрын
... LDX at MIT
@spammerscammer
@spammerscammer Жыл бұрын
Not sure if you've heard but greater than net fusion was achieved this week.
@shanehays1076
@shanehays1076 Жыл бұрын
@@alanmalcheski8882 join
@SA-ks9vz
@SA-ks9vz Жыл бұрын
I've been studying fusion generation for most of my life and this is the most viable fusion generator to become reality. The only concern I would have is the stability of the magnetic field and any losses due to instability.
@philliplapkovitch311
@philliplapkovitch311 Жыл бұрын
I'm no physicist nor a scientist I am just a handyman that is always had an interest and I agree with your concern watching the whole video and how they're explaining that things happen in milliseconds at temperatures hotter than the sun and materials that can contain it even the capacitors that fire this off if something goes wrong do you have the time to fix it or shut it down or the ability for a safety switch to shut it down before you lose it how many times have you heard it's going so fast and oops I can't stop it oops is the worst word even in what I do
@jingbot1071
@jingbot1071 Жыл бұрын
@@philliplapkovitch311 There is enough heat shielding that you would likely see glowing metal long before anything exploded, and your computer system is going to be able to predict something going wrong. Most likely, a failure just means you have dissipating plasma heat in a tube full of heat sinks.
@mjinba07
@mjinba07 Жыл бұрын
@@jingbot1071 I have very little confidence in computer systems, even those with multiple redundancies, to respond and contain such a disaster. There are just too many bugs, too much vulnerability to hacking, too much vulnerability to human error, extraterrestrial events like solar flares, and other interruptions, and the more complex the system the more chaotic the risk... Yes one can argue that safeguards can be implemented, but however smart and knowledgeable we are there will be risks we can't foresee, and the consequences of a single disaster, however unlikely, would be very dire indeed.
@jingbot1071
@jingbot1071 Жыл бұрын
@@mjinba07 If the computer system shuts down completely, again, you have a bunch of hot gas contained by heat shielding. And the on/off switch is a valve, manual, not computerized.
@bobespirit2112
@bobespirit2112 Жыл бұрын
Isn’t worst case that the immediate container materials would melt and destroy the reactor but as the fusion reaction will cease and there is no adverse radiation created, there is no threat to the general public or even power plant staff? Maybe a reactor could “explode” to some degree but external shielding would be in place to contain any bits…?
@Fidelis-534
@Fidelis-534 8 ай бұрын
just 2 months away guys. I cant wait for fusion.
@elmarmoelzer2229
@elmarmoelzer2229 8 ай бұрын
Beginning of 2024 is target for construction to finish. End of 2024 is target for net energy gain. Give or take a few months. They will need some time to "break it in" and optimize it. Also, the machine changes a bit over the first few thousand pulses. Some components expand, contract and shift a bit due to magnetic and thermal stresses. So, they have to readjust and re- set some of the millions of parameters.
@TheMightyKinkle
@TheMightyKinkle Ай бұрын
At 3:08, it says the sun's density is only 160g/CM3. That can't be right 🤔
@Tgspartnership
@Tgspartnership Жыл бұрын
those quartz pipes are beautifully made!
@ElectricFuture
@ElectricFuture Жыл бұрын
You can see a diamond drill mounted to the right of the tube. During my visit there was a nervous technician painstakingly drilling each hole for the diagnostic lasers, trying not to crack the thing.
@doribellan
@doribellan Жыл бұрын
I am a scientist in a program that uses 3He to date groundwater, along with Tritium. Deuterium is also used in our groundwater tracer studies. It’s exciting to see this technology for fusion electricity generation.
@Suursteruim
@Suursteruim 17 күн бұрын
I watched a video last year where someone toured a British fusion Startup that managed to get a net fusion reactor up and running as well, it might have been this company. I am excited about where things are going here.
@screwthecabal6453
@screwthecabal6453 12 күн бұрын
Fusion isn't the holy grail of energy, zero point energy is.
@Lemurai
@Lemurai Жыл бұрын
It’s sad that as an engineer, I’d get paid more designing and manufacturing weapons than I ever would for R&D in the pursuit of real science and constructive goals. I just don’t understand humans. However, I am not confident in this working within the life times of the youngest born children currently on earth.
@thoughtlesskills
@thoughtlesskills Жыл бұрын
I want to believe that someday we will grow beyond 'me before we'. I am certainly not holding my breath.
@hackman669
@hackman669 Жыл бұрын
Use free energy to make old ideas go extinct. Crowd funding and public access are key.
@AdA-rl4eo
@AdA-rl4eo Жыл бұрын
The best science class I ever had. Great explainer! 👏
@SirNose687
@SirNose687 Жыл бұрын
I was so excited when I first heard about this… 40 years ago…
@woodzyfox4735
@woodzyfox4735 9 ай бұрын
Deutrium (Heavy water) can also be made in very very small amounts when you have an HHO Generator! Its like 0.01% per gals of liquid converted
@sunnyyang8119
@sunnyyang8119 Жыл бұрын
So it's happening 2 yrs ahead of the schedule😂
@elmarmoelzer2229
@elmarmoelzer2229 Жыл бұрын
That was a different machine by a different group and it did not produce net electricity like Polaris will.
@hammerdragon4321
@hammerdragon4321 Жыл бұрын
Sounds like the early version of the warp drive if they keep going we’ll be living in the Star Trek era. Very cool video
@jeffmullinix7916
@jeffmullinix7916 Жыл бұрын
I had just come across this . This had put me back from when I was kid . I used to lay in bed to sleep and just think of stuff that I thought was not been thought of then . I think I was about 6 or 7 years old when I thought about something like this fusion . Now I did knew about Nuclear and what it could do . I though about compressing what made up a atom on the inside and making what was on the inside of it to fuse together and making not only heat but also electricity and using that to power everything . I also thought that doing this it could even power a space ship to near or at the speed of light . I remember feeling happy of just the thought of it and how it could change the world . No mining of coal or pumping oil , or burning of trees or any other cabon fuels . Cars could last ten years before needing a few oz of fuel . Trucks , trains , aircraft and ships the same way . Maybe even a thousand years . There will be no rads from it or wast . Then one time I thought about using static electricity to push objects . If that could be done then maybe we dont even need nuclear at all . Charge a car in less than a half sec or anything that uses electric motors . Power a home for 100 years between charges .
@AlanTheTrueGuff
@AlanTheTrueGuff 3 ай бұрын
The NIF actually made the milestone of producing more than was consumed in 2022. Great milestone met!
@cmw3737
@cmw3737 Жыл бұрын
I'd like more explanation of the diagram at 16:21 as to how they produce the He3. It has 2 deuterium atoms being combined to get either He3 + a neutron or Tritium + a proton but it seems like that's the big problem that other fusion projects are attempting, and they are mostly admitting that is too difficult and going for the easier combination of Deuterium and Tritium. If they can do it then great, we get a new supply of helium without needing to go to the moon but just saying they've patented something is skipping over a major part of the problem.
@chacetgraham
@chacetgraham Жыл бұрын
I was thinking the same thing.
@13055
@13055 Жыл бұрын
Go ahead and add a collaboration with a company (relatively new also) that is trying to reduce the cost of jumping into space and coming back down. A bigger picture might start to unfold.
@elmarmoelzer2229
@elmarmoelzer2229 Жыл бұрын
It is very hard to achieve ignition with D-D fusion that is right. It is even harder with Tokamaks. This is why Helion is not doing ignition and their machine is not a Tokamak.
@paulaxton72
@paulaxton72 Жыл бұрын
remember the end result is trying to get to He4 he's trying to see if there is a non space way to aquire He3 hence the fusion part of the equation .
@davidkneil1045
@davidkneil1045 Жыл бұрын
Lots of He3 on the moon. I think that's why everyone is suddenly interested in going back.
@bodypilot2006
@bodypilot2006 Жыл бұрын
This for once has technical merit and practical application over tokamak and stellerator. You have to appreciate companies that actually think through the chain of obstacles.
@erode.5101
@erode.5101 Жыл бұрын
This is literally a thermonuclear device, what would happen if something went wrong?
@MarkBarrack
@MarkBarrack Жыл бұрын
@@erode.5101 what could go wrong? Geez
@MrBottlecapBill
@MrBottlecapBill Жыл бұрын
@@MarkBarrack Not much at this point since they can barely even get it going in the first place. 😆
@abacusextreme1082
@abacusextreme1082 Жыл бұрын
@@erode.5101 if you aren't smart enough to know the diffrence between thermo nuclear and fusion, then just dont speak.
@johnathanpratt944
@johnathanpratt944 Жыл бұрын
Gosh everyone is so negative and also didn't realize this is fusion, not fission!
@pahtar7189
@pahtar7189 7 ай бұрын
It's intriguing to think that fusion power might finally come to pass. How it affects the world depends in large part on (a) the cost to build and operate a power plant and (b) whether it can be practically scaled to operate a ship or power a city.
@remuskynsaber1165
@remuskynsaber1165 Жыл бұрын
If im not mistaken, we achieved a net gain in power in December of 2022
@GCSEPhysicsExplained
@GCSEPhysicsExplained Жыл бұрын
I’m a secondary school physics teacher. I’m teaching about non-renewable and renewable sources of energy next week. It’s so hopeful that there are scientists out there dedicating their lives to trying to get nuclear fusion to be feasible. The biggest bonus is that hopefully we can stop polluting the planet with fossil fuels. I’ll definitely be showing my students this video. Let’s inspire the next generation of scientists. Subbed 👏🏻💪🏻
@anticorporatists9959
@anticorporatists9959 Жыл бұрын
It's not just getting off fossil fuels but trying to get off all forms of limited energy sources and to transition onto an unlimited self sufficient energy sources that witch is the answer for its safe for the environment its save people money and will never run out of energy ever
@nickbrutanna9973
@nickbrutanna9973 Жыл бұрын
The best thing -- and most key, from my own understanding, is that the fusion reaction releases a high-energy proton, not a high-energy neutron. We only know (AFAIK) one way to get energy out of neutrons -- slam them into something to heat it up. This, unfortunately, also makes it radioactive, which is a longer-term problem, as radioactive materials, while they can be useful, need to be of a certain type. and that is the tricky part of getting energy from many fusion systems -- they are not as "clean" as implied by the fusion itself. By capturing high-energy protons ("HEPs"), you can use a charged field to slow them down and suck the energy out of them that way. I'd be very interested in seeing how they solve that problem -- reprocessing the fusion byproducts and sucking the energy out of the HEPs. That one of their sources of HE3, the more unusual part of the process is to use deuterium to make it plus a neutron, I want to know what happens to that neutron. That is, as noted, not a simple thing. I suppose you could just "let it go", but not sure that is advisable, either. While it will decay at some point, it is probably an "HEN", so you can't just make it sit still, it wants to hare off and ram into something. I note that they said the inner core of this thing needs to be able to resist neutrons. And thus, "Ahem!".
@Dennzer1
@Dennzer1 Жыл бұрын
@@nickbrutanna9973 No one knows what you are saying.
@mylestman9861
@mylestman9861 Жыл бұрын
Get them hyped up bring in the "Tony stark" reactor and tell them it is possible but itll be one of them that finds it 🤷
@mega7509
@mega7509 Жыл бұрын
@@Dennzer1 Speak for yourself! Just because you don't that doesn't mean other people don't either.
@empoweredchoice1893
@empoweredchoice1893 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for this content. It is very well put together and entertaining for someone like me that knows nothing about the subject.
@robertglover6538
@robertglover6538 Жыл бұрын
Same. Seem out of my league compared to all these other commentators
@JeswuanThomas-mq5vx
@JeswuanThomas-mq5vx 5 ай бұрын
That sounds like a new type of engine I will call it a pulse generator
@iAmit_Kumar
@iAmit_Kumar Ай бұрын
.... Awesome Explaining ❤
@oldionus
@oldionus Жыл бұрын
Most of this was new to me, which is always a delight. Thanks for a very interesting and encouraging video.... even if they're not quite there yet, it's great to see this "new golden age of invention" unfolding!
@londen3547
@londen3547 Жыл бұрын
Disclaimer.......for entertainment purposes only.
@Mike-uo2gg
@Mike-uo2gg Жыл бұрын
We should be transferring from our current nuclear energy source to thorium. Except we can't use that to make nuclear weapons.
@lstump4482
@lstump4482 Жыл бұрын
didn't they just get it to work?
@mikeshogunlee
@mikeshogunlee Жыл бұрын
No... Someone else did... They did it with the laser method they were talking about in the beginning of the video. Instead of inventing a new form of electricity production, they got a steam powered spinning magnet to generate 3 megajoules with only an input of 1 megajoules. This was not the first time someone tried to dethrone the generator, but the Generator has won again.
@lgonzalez1154
@lgonzalez1154 7 ай бұрын
Yes they did!
@sfacets
@sfacets Жыл бұрын
1:37 Ok tell me you don't look like Alfred Molina in Spiderman in this shot.
@WombatCombat007
@WombatCombat007 7 ай бұрын
Great vid, always liked fusion but this company blows me away...it's a very complex idea, but if you can do direct to power energy conversion, it'd be amazing, also ideal for spaceships.
@blairzettl3933
@blairzettl3933 Жыл бұрын
Congrats for the well-produced video and this important technology. A few comments: renewables will never ever provide baseload power. Most important use case is off-grid, specifically where the cost of installing grid infrastructure exceeds the cost of renewables c/w storage. "Modern" nuclear plants are not LWRs, those are old plants designed to create bomb-making material. High efficiency plants such as molten salt reactors (MSRs) are truly modern. The reason for this is MSRs are 6 times more efficient that LWRs, are much safer, similar to Helion's design, require energy input in order to sustain reaction, and produce radio active waste with a half-life of 300 years, not 10s of thousands. They can also be manufactured and output modular units, then retrofitted into old coal-fire plants, leveraging all of the existing infrastructure. This tech came out of ORNL in the 60s lead by Alvin Weinberg, brought back to life by Sorensen of Flibe Energy. Terrestrial Energy is also utilizing this tech planning a full roll-out by 2030.
@nolimitarcade2865
@nolimitarcade2865 Жыл бұрын
For far more than a half of a century, the "Fusion Theory" has made it's proponents very wealthy, those proponents include the Oil Industry that want to extend the market life of THEIR product, dirty fossil fuels. See.THORIUM
@massivecumshot
@massivecumshot Жыл бұрын
In 7 years watching KZfaq I've never seen a more detailed, clear and information packed video. I want to invest in technology like this and will be contacting Helion because of this video.
@MrZoomZone
@MrZoomZone Жыл бұрын
I agree Helion has great merit, BUT don't be blinded by science. Consider that much simpler methods like molten salt solar concentrators have failed commercial viability (befor Putin) because they had to pay people to pollish the mirrors and maintain their tracking mechanisms in non hostile conditions. Also this would be very long term - more like thirty years before ROI - how long are you prepared to wait and what might happen in the meanwhile.
@danielvonbose557
@danielvonbose557 6 ай бұрын
Sounds like everybody else until you brought up aneutronic fusion and harvesting the charged particles directly. Makes sense. First really new idea in a while.
@josephflavell8519
@josephflavell8519 Жыл бұрын
you need a magnetic pulses solar core ,magnetron solar panels rotation with positive effects on energy, good work so far people's, love and bless you all, your Jojo...
@davidlecottage
@davidlecottage Жыл бұрын
Finally a well thought out and well presented description of a real fusion option.
@tacobell2009
@tacobell2009 Жыл бұрын
This video brings me hope that we can actually achieve positive energy nuclear fusion in my lifetime. I have my doubts that it will happen by 2024, but I am rather excited to see what advancements are made in the coming years.
@michaelclark4876
@michaelclark4876 Жыл бұрын
2024 seems very optimistic especially since in 2014 they were saying they would do it by 2019. If it took 8 real years to make 3 years of startup-hype progress, then 2028 maybe? More seriously, one of the biggest things to look at for viability is their progress in making He3. The energy and cost needed to do it will need to be added to the cost of the fusion reaction, and deuterium-He3 fusion already has to reach a much higher temperature for peak efficiency than deuterium-tritium fusion. Although more efficient conversion to electricity lowers the fusion efficiency needed for it to be commercially viable. And deuterium-tritium fuel cycles also suffer from scarce fuel, tritium also needing to be made though there are several ways to do it, and so far there has not been adequate consideration of that fact. We are way behind on tritium manufacturing capacity even in regards to what we need for fusion research let alone commercial electricity production.
@Kvothe_The_Bloodless
@Kvothe_The_Bloodless Жыл бұрын
Its the fact people don't know what its about and how amazing it could be. But people just hear nuclear and it turns them off to it without even trying to understand most of it and just assuming its something destructive.
@chrisfallis5851
@chrisfallis5851 Жыл бұрын
I started college in 1977 at a school that had a lab working on laser fusion. I have been on the edge of my seat waiting for many, many years for a practical application of this technology.
@simmerke1111
@simmerke1111 Жыл бұрын
In our lifetime might be optimistic, too. These dates are mostly used for fund runs. We'll see if they tackle the problems thousands have failed. They're going for harder methods that we've seen attempted before. Not putting any stock into any of these projects unless they prove they're at a positive Q value, not a positive Qp.
@michaelclark4876
@michaelclark4876 Жыл бұрын
@@Kvothe_The_Bloodless Unfortunately you're right about irrational fear of the word nuclear. How many people know the proper name for magnetic resonance imaging is nuclear magnetic resonance imaging. Because the technology underlying it is nuclear magnetic resonance. The nuclear was dropped because of the connotations.
@chucktowne
@chucktowne Жыл бұрын
Great explanation of how it works and what they are trying to do! I still wont believe it until I see it. This has been talked about for so many years and they always say "right around the corner". Well, where is this corner? It would be nice for this corner to hurry up an appear.
@rogerrabbit80
@rogerrabbit80 Жыл бұрын
I've been hearing people talking about fusion being workable "real soon now" for at least 50 years. Somehow, it still hasn't happened. So, I always take stories like this with a very large grain of salt.
@macbuff81
@macbuff81 Жыл бұрын
The whole steam piece of energy generation always seemed a bit wasteful to me. Cutting out that process seems like a logical step
@mnomadvfx
@mnomadvfx Жыл бұрын
It's not merely wasteful, it's insanely difficult to engineer steam energy transfer without putting the breaks on the fusion reaction in the process. Even small interactions of the plasma with the reactor wall can impact plasma stability so trying to transfer that power water would be extrememly difficult to do efficiently without all but putting the breaks on the fusion reaction and forcing a complete restart.
@pei-tzuchen7847
@pei-tzuchen7847 13 күн бұрын
Thank you for your teaching ❤💞
@fancygaming2883
@fancygaming2883 Жыл бұрын
Im happy I can semi-grasp this
@fluffyhamster550
@fluffyhamster550 Жыл бұрын
This is Insanely interesting, and I sincerely hope that they will succeed!👍👍👍👍👍👍
@illreel5169
@illreel5169 Жыл бұрын
Extremely innovative approach, The Protium displacement worries me though... I hope they are looking at the reactors in different light spectrums... 👑✨👑
@unmaskedandanonymous3660
@unmaskedandanonymous3660 Жыл бұрын
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