« Participatory Panopticon Update, June Edition | Main | Power Generating Microbes »

Another Path to Desktop Fusion

pocketfusion.jpgLooks like sonofusion is going to have some competition. Researchers at UCLA have succeeded in producing a fusion reaction on the desktop using a "pyroelectric" crystal (i.e., a crystal that produces electricity due to temperature changes). The crystal fusion technique is less exotic than sonofusion, but also (apparently) less controversial. The report of the desktop fusion reaction appeared in Nature; as usual, the article itself is subscribers-only, but supplemental material (including two mpeg videos) are freely available.

The design of the "reactor" is startling in its simplicity: a small pyroelectric crystal (lithium tantalite) rests inside a chamber filled with deuterated hydrogen. Warming the crystal from -30 F to 45 F results in an electrical field of about 100,000 volts across the crystal, which is then concentrated by the insertion of a metal wire tip near the crystal. The result is a neutron flux over 400 times background, about 1,000 neutrons per second -- a characteristic sign of fusion.

The amount of energy coming from the reaction is much lower than the energy used to produce it, so this is by no means is an indicator that limitless fusion energy is just around the corner. Nonetheless, this is a simple way of producing a neutron flux, useful for a variety of tasks, from scanning luggage at airports to tumor removal to microthrusters for tiny satellites. And while it's not likely, the possibility that this breakthrough could eventually lead to energy production can't be ruled out.

Decent write-ups of the story can be found at Nature News, the Christian Science Monitor, MSNBC, and WBCSD.

TrackBack

Listed below are links to weblogs that reference Another Path to Desktop Fusion:

» Simple Desktop Fusion Achieved from The Scientific Indian
WorldChanging reports that desktop fusion just got one more contender. When Rusi Taleyarkhan announced, in March 2002, that his team had succeeded in table-top nuclear fusion, using a method that came to called Sonofusion (the process got called Sonolu [Read More]

» Simple Desktop Fusion Achieved from The Scientific Indian
WorldChanging reports that desktop fusion just got one more contender. When Rusi Taleyarkhan announced, in March 2002, that his team had succeeded in table-top nuclear fusion, using a method that came to called Sonofusion (the process got called Sonolu [Read More]

» New Energy Currents: 06-17-2005 from Winds of Change.NET
This week, debate in the Senate began in earnest on the federal energy bill - and the debate in the US, around the world, and on the internet shows no signs of aba... [Read More]

» New Energy Currents: 06-17-2005 from Winds of Change.NET
This week, debate in the Senate began in earnest on the federal energy bill - and the debate in the US, around the world, and on the internet shows no signs of aba... [Read More]

About

This page contains a single entry from the blog posted on June 8, 2005 12:47 PM.

The previous post in this blog was Participatory Panopticon Update, June Edition.

The next post in this blog is Power Generating Microbes.

Many more can be found on the main index page or by looking through the archives.

Powered by
Movable Type 3.34