| Fusion Find Revolutionizes Energy
By Clive Cookson, Financial Times of London
The Financial Post (Toronto, Canada)
Friday, March 24, 1989, daily edition
'Ridiculously simple' test could
lead to unlimited, cheap power
Two scientists announced yesterday they have carried out controlled
nuclear fusion in a test tube. If their discovery is confirmed, they will have
gone a long way towards taming the forces powering the sun and the hydrogen
bomb. These could provide virtually unlimited, clean and inexpensive energy.
Professor Martin Fleischmann of Southampton University in Britain and
Professor Stan Pons of the University of Utah, have apparently done in a
simple
laboratory what has not been achieved by gigantic projects costing hundreds of
millions of dollars a year.
Nuclear fusion, which releases energy by joining light atoms such as
deuterium and tritium, has several potential advantages over nuclear fission -
the process of splitting heavy atoms such as uranium and plutonium, which
fuels
all current nuclear power stations.
Fusion produces little radioactive waste. Its raw material, deuterium, is
abundant in sea water. Fusion reactors are also expected to be safer than
fission reactors, because the fusion process would shut down if anything went
wrong.
Technically, the experiments carried out by Professors Fleischmann
and Pons
at the University of Utah are no more complex than the practical work done by
chemistry undergraduates. They use electrochemical techniques to achieve
fusion
of deuterium nuclei trapped inside an electrode made from palladium, a metal
similar to platinum.
"What we have done is open the door to a new area of research,"
Fleischmann said. "Our indications are that the discovery will be reasonably
easy to make into a usable technology for generating heat and power, but a lot
more work is needed to prove its validity further and then to develop
practical
generating devices."
Physicists find it hard to believe the deuterium nuclei could be squeezed
together enough for fusion to occur.
However, Dr. Mick Lomer, head of the British Atomic Energy Authority's
fusion laboratory at Culham, Oxfordshire, said: ''We're approaching it with a
skeptical but open mind. We shall be doing our utmost to reproduce the
experiment.''
Fleischmann said: ''The nature of the experiment is so ridiculously
simple,
yet in a way so far-fetched, that we decided not to raise money from external
sources but to finance the early work ourselves.''
If the Utah research can be commercialized, small or even portable
nuclear
fusion cells may be feasible.
(In accordance with Title 17, Section 107, of the U.S. Code, this material
is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest
in receiving the included information for research and educational
purposes. New Energy Times has no affiliation whatsoever with the
originator of the original text in this article; nor is New Energy Times
endorsed or sponsored by the originator.)
"Go to Original" links are provided as a convenience to our readers and allow for verification of authenticity. However, as originating pages are often updated by their originating host sites, the versions posted on New Energy Times may not match the versions our readers view when clicking the "Go to Original" links.
|