Sci-Tech: MIT SPARC project aims to build demo fusion power reactor with private funds

Over the years I’ve posted a number of times about innovative fusion power projects that are underway in various places (e.g. see Tri-Alpha EnergyGeneral Fusion, Lockheed Compact FusionEMC2 polywell, Helion Energy, and LPP focus fusion) each aims for a much smaller and practical power plant than the giant ITER tokomak and NIF laser inertial confinement projects that consume most all of the government funding for fusion power. (Similar to the way SLS/Orion eat huge chunks of NASA funding that should go instead for development of technologies that would actually benefit and accelerate the exploration and development of space.) So most of these are using private funding with perhaps a trickle of government funding.

iter
The ITER design. Note the person for scale.

The MIT Affordable Robust Compact (ARC) fusion reactor looks like a conventional toroidal (i.e. doughnut shaped) design approach like a tokamak but it is drastically smaller and less complex than ITER. It accomplishes this by employing super high magnetic fields now possible with coils made from rare-earth barium copper oxide (REBCO) superconducting tapes that are proven and commercially available. Such high fields allow for a much smaller containment vessel for the 100 million degree plasma of deuterium and tritium ions and in turn the volume (and cost) of the reactor shrinks dramatically.

ARC-ConceptMIT ARC fusion pilot plant concept design.

ARC-Concept-ModularThe heat would be extracted via a blanket of liquid FLiBe molten salt that surrounds the containment vessel. Neutrons from the D-T reaction heat up this liquid, which will in turn heat up water for a conventional steam generator to produce electricity.

Furthermore, ARC uses a modular design that allows for relatively easy removal and replacement of the containment vessel, which will be damaged over time by the neuron bombardment.

The molten salt blanket approach is much simpler than the complex mechanical piping structure planned for ITER, which will require long shutdowns to disassemble the reactor and replace the damaged components.

ITER will cost $40 billion, take decades to complete, and is only a science experiment. It will produce 500W of thermal energy but no  electricity. Development of an ARC reactor that would provide 500W thermal and 200MW of actual electricity for the grid and would cost less than a tenth of ITER.

The MIT group has designed a small demonstration reactor called  SPARC, Soonest/Smallest Private-Funded Affordable Robust Compact, that they estimate will cost in the $300M range. And, as the name says, they believe they can fund it with non-government money. Some money may come from a new MIT fund that is backing various leading edge technologies.

SPARC-ConceptProf. Dennis Whyte, head of the MIT Nuclear Science & Engineering Dept, gives a very interesting review of the ARC and SPARC projects, at a general audience level, in this video:

The projects mentioned at the top promise advantages over ARC. For example, some plan to use aneutronic reactions like Proton–Boron that do not produce neutrons and instead allow for direct extraction of electricity from charge particles emitted from the reactions. Most would be even more compact than ARC. However, none of these concepts are proven yet and so it is best if as many of them are pursued as possible to have the best chance of finding at least one that produces useful power from nuclear fusion.