December 13, 2022

LLNL Scientists Report Fusion Breakthrough


On Dec. 5, a team at Lawrence Livermore National Lab’s (LLNL) National Ignition Facility (NIF) conducted the first controlled fusion experiment in history to reach fusion "ignition," which is believed to be a breakthrough milestone, where the fusion reaction begins to produce more energy from fusion than the energy applied to drive it.

Scientists studying fusion energy at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) in California determined via calculations that they had crossed a long-awaited threshold in reproducing the power of the sun in a laboratory. It took a few days for them to do their analysis of the energy product but by Sunday, Dec. 11th, word had begun to leak out. The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) , having provided the primary funding for this work, took the lead in taking credit for the achievement and scheduled a press announcement for Tuesday, Dec. 13th.  Meanwhile, various results were reported in the press, some claiming 120% gain, some going as high as 150% gain.  While the exact number is not that critical, what is important is that these scientists and experts believe that there was a notable achievement in the operation of the plasma ignition that took place, even though it lasted for all of a fraction of a second.

“This is a landmark achievement for the researchers and staff at the National Ignition Facility who have dedicated their careers to seeing fusion ignition become a reality, and this milestone will undoubtedly spark even more discovery,” said U.S. Secretary of Energy Jennifer M. Granholm. “The Biden-Harris Administration is committed to supporting our world-class scientists — like the team at NIF — whose work will help us solve humanity’s most complex and pressing problems, like providing clean power to combat climate change and maintaining a nuclear deterrent without nuclear testing.”

LLNL’s experiment surpassed the fusion threshold by delivering 2.05 megajoules (MJ) of laser energy to the target, resulting in 3.15 MJ of fusion energy output, demonstrating for the first time a most fundamental science basis for inertial fusion energy (IFE). Many advanced science and technology developments are still needed to achieve simple, affordable IFE to power homes and businesses, and DOE is currently restarting a broad-based, coordinated IFE program in the United States. Combined with private-sector investment, there is a lot of momentum to drive rapid progress toward fusion commercialization.

Led by physicist John Nuckolls, who later served as LLNL director from 1988 to 1994, this revolutionary idea became inertial confinement fusion, kicking off more than 60 years of research and development in lasers, optics, diagnostics, target fabrication, computer modeling and simulation and experimental design.

To pursue this concept, LLNL built a series of increasingly powerful laser systems, leading to the creation of NIF, the world’s largest and most energetic laser system. NIF — located at LLNL in Livermore, California — is the size of a sports stadium and uses powerful laser beams to create temperatures and pressures like those in the cores of stars and giant planets, and inside exploding nuclear weapons.

[Note: Nucleation Capital has invested in Focused Energy, a private venture which has chosen to develop fusion by following the same Inertial Fusion Energy approach as that used by LLNL. Focused was founded by scientists who had worked at LLNL and who have spent their careers studying both fusion and lasers. Focused Energy has based their ability to deliver fusion upon their expertise in developing the next generation of high-powered laser and the next generation of fuel target, taking what LLNL has done forward with proprietary technology.]

Read more at Lawrence Livermore National Lab: National Ignition Facility achieves fusion ignition, published December 13, 2022; The New York Times, Scientists Achieve Nuclear Fusion Breakthrough With Blast of 192 Lasers, by Kenneth Chang, December 13, 2022; and the Financial Times, Fusion energy breakthrough by US scientists boosts clean power hopes, by Tom Wilson, December 13, 2022.  Also see the statement from TAE, a fusion competitor, TAE Technologies’ statement on US nuclear fusion advancement.

October 31, 2022

Michael (Marty) Marinak: Computational physicist at LLNL

Marty serves as a computational physicist for the Lawrence Livermore National Lab in the National Ignition Facility group. He  received his Bachelor’s Degree in Nuclear Engineering from U.C. Berkeley. After graduating, Marty was awarded a Berkeley Fellowship for Graduate Study and proceeded to earn a Ph.D. in Nuclear Engineering from the University of California at Berkeley in 1993.

Cross-section of a holrum.

This graphic shows a high-resolution 3D HYDRA capsule simulation of a June 2017 NIF shot. The spherical contour surface shows the ablation front colored by ion temperature. The cutaway view shows density on the right where the capsule shell contains the hot spot. The jet from the fill tube is visible near the equator. Ion temperature is shown on the left. Credit: Marty Marinak.

Dr. Marinak is the lead developer for HYDRA, the principal Inertial Confinement Fusion (ICF) simulation code used today. It is because of that simulation capability—combined with exponential growth in high performance computing (HPC) at LLNL, which allowed for the first high-resolution fully spherical 3D simulations of ICF implosions, as well a breakthroughs in ignition at NIF. The code continues to be fundamental for target designers to “try things out” and provides insights into which designs could be successful, given that there are limited numbers of "shots" from the NIF each year.

In April 2023, the National Ignition Facility published an article "Computing Codes, Simulations Helped Make Ignition Possible," with a few quotes from Marty regarding the work he was doing designing codes and computer simulations that have enabled NIF's quest for ignition. Codes are what provide valuaable information that can be used to analyze data and extrapolate predicted results from implosion symmetry, stability and timing, to better tailor new trials for success.

Now that NIF has achieved ignition, this has validated the success of the HYDRA codes developed which enabled the scientists working with the target fabrication team and the laser teams to view full-sphere simulations, giving them a much clearer understanding of what problems needed to be fixed to make ignition happen. In doing so, HYDRA guided the ICF process to move closer to the target reality and achieve success.

“When we started generating diagnostics from full-sphere 3D simulations, a lot of the mysteries went away,” Marinak said. “The simulations told us if you fixed just one of those issues, you probably wouldn't be able to measure an improvement. Even if you fixed all of them to within target fabrication’s abilities, you still wouldn't get the capsule to ignite. That was the turning point. We couldn’t just fix the sources of asymmetry. We needed a more robust target. . . .

Based on the knowledge gained from HYDRA and other codes, Marinak was confident target design was “moving in the right direction” and would eventually result in higher yields.

“I always thought we would make it, but ignition is difficult and was harder to accomplish than we had thought, and that's probably why there’s no one else in the world that has done it,” Marinak said. “Now we have a much clearer understanding of the behavior of these implosions and the challenges that must be overcome.

“We promised that we could do this thing that no one else has done before for stockpile stewardship and for other purposes, and it was greatly rewarding to finally see that we helped to make that happen.”

Dr. Marinak is the principal author on a number of articles in peer-reviewed scientific journals, and co-author on many more.

 

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