| The D-T reactions have
the disadvantages that 80% of the energy is carried out by
high energy neutrons and that tritium must be generated inside
the reactor. The high velocity neutrons impose massive shielding
requirements, produce radiation damage and are a source of
undesired activation of the reactor structure. To generate
tritium, a highly complex breeding blanket must surround the
reactor core. Other reactions, having a highly reduced or
completely absent neutron output and utilizing fuels that
do not require breeding have therefore been considered. For
example, in a D-D reactor, tritium would only be produced
in small amounts by a secondary reaction and most of the neutrons
resulting from this process would have much less energy and
thus would be easier to shield. Similarly a reactor operating
on H-B fuel would virtually suppress neutron production and
could even lead to efficient direct conversion to electricity.
A D-He3 mixture would not have tritium breeding requirements
but would give neutron yields several orders of magnitude
below those from the D-T reaction (furthermore He3 is virtually
non-existent on earth and may have to be transported from
the moon).
However, the use of these so-called advanced
fuels faces many difficulties. Because of their lower fusion
reactivity, the power density in the plasma for a given plasma
pressure would be 50-100 times smaller for any other fusion
fuel than for D-T and the required confinement time would
be 25-50 times larger. This would require either operation
at much higher values of density and temperature. There are
several other complexities involved. For the first generation
of fusion reactors, the fuel will certainly be D-T, and the
neutron problems will be tackled by using low activation structural
materials, presently under development. Advanced fuels will
therefore be investigated only as a next generation option. |