New third-party analyses support General Fusion’s MTF technology path to commercialization

RICHMOND, British Columbia, Sept. 19, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- New analyses from the U.S. Savannah River National Laboratory (SRNL) and UK Atomic Energy Authority (UKAEA) support General Fusionโ€™s Magnetized Target Fusion (MTF) design approach to shielding the fusion machineโ€™s vessel from neutron damage and producing enough tritium to sustain power plant operations for the life of the machine. These characteristics of General Fusionโ€™s unique approach are designed to address two key barriers to commercializing fusion power: sustainable fuel use and production and the โ€˜first wall problem.โ€™

โ€œThis is why I chose to pursue Magnetized Target Fusion with a liquid metal wall when I founded General Fusion. The SRNL and UKAEA analyses confirm that our approach inherently solves key challenges in fusion power plant design,โ€ said Dr. Michel Laberge, Founder and Chief Science Officer, General Fusion. โ€œThe liquid metal provides a unique and simple solution to the โ€˜first wall problemโ€™ and fuel sustainability. We are tackling those barriers now to deliver what matters most: a practical power plant that is cost competitive.โ€

UKAEA modelling and SRNL study support General Fusionโ€™s approach to fusion fuel sustainability

UKAEA modelling indicates that General Fusionโ€™s power plant will generate sufficient tritium to fuel the plant for the life of its operations. Tritium is a key component of fuel used in most fusion technologies but is a scarce resource. Therefore, commercial fusion power plants must produce enough tritium to ensure a self-sustaining fuel source. The key metric to describe a fusion power plantโ€™s ability to produce tritium is its Tritium Breeding Ratio (TBR). General Fusionโ€™s unique liquid metal wall contains lithium, which is transformed into tritium and helium by fusion neutrons. To assess General Fusionโ€™s TBR, the UKAEA conducted modelling with simplified spherical parameters representative of the companyโ€™s commercial MTF concept and calculated advantageous tritium breeding ratios greater than 1.5. For comparison, a power plant requires a minimum TBR of 1.1 to ensure it will breed sufficient fuel for the life of its operations.1

The SRNL study, completed as part of the U.S. Department of Energyโ€™s INFUSE program, builds upon the UKAEAโ€™s analysis and further confirms the tritium supply advantages of General Fusionโ€™s power plant design. The study considered how much tritium would be needed to start up a General Fusion machine, the total amount of tritium required to operate the machine, and the amount of time it would take to breed enough tritium to fuel a second power plant, known as doubling time. SRNLโ€™s study found that the design requires less tritium for start-up, has a significantly lower doubling time, and has a higher tritium breeding ratio than what is publicly available for traditional tokamak fusion approaches. This analysis supports General Fusionโ€™s approach to designing a practical solution to ensure commercial fusion technology can operate sustainably into the future.

UKAEA modelling supports General Fusionโ€™s approach to addressing the โ€˜first wall problemโ€™

The UKAEAโ€™s modelling also supports General Fusionโ€™s plasma compression approach using a liquid metal wallโ€”the game-changer in General Fusionโ€™s power plant designโ€”to shield the vessel from neutron activation. This shielding will address the critical โ€˜first wall problemโ€™ โ€“ the damage fusion machine vessels incur when bombarded with neutrons produced by fusion. With its liquid metal wall, General Fusionโ€™s commercial machine will operate without frequent major equipment replacements, driving significant advantages in efficiency, capacity factor, and capital and operational cost.

โ€œWhile weโ€™re on track to achieve transformative technical milestones with LM26 over the next 24 months, weโ€™re simultaneously making steady progress in hardening our commercial power plant design, so we are prepared for the next phase,โ€ said Greg Twinney, CEO, General Fusion. โ€œValidating our technology with top-tier external experts, including the UKAEA and SRNL, is crucial for building confidence in our approach. These results reinforce our missionโ€”not just to achieve fusion, but to make fusion power a commercial reality.โ€

Quick Facts:

  • General Fusion will be creating fusion energy with deuterium and tritium.ย 
  • Fusion fuel is made up of hydrogen isotopes deuterium and tritium. Deuterium is naturally occurring and can be derived from seawater.
  • In General Fusionโ€™s MTF approach, the proprietary liquid metal liner in the fusion vessel is mechanically compressed by high-powered pistons. This allows General Fusion to create fusion conditions in short pulses, rather than creating a sustained reaction, while protecting the machineโ€™s vessel, extracting heat, and re-breeding fuel.
  • The technology is designed to scale for cost-efficient power plants. It does not require large superconducting magnets or an expensive array of lasers.
  • The company is accelerating its progress by building a fusion demonstration called Lawson Machine 26 (LM26) to achieve technical breakthroughs that will de-risk and fast-track the path to a power plant. LM26 is designed to achieve fusion conditions of over 100 million degrees Celsius by 2025 and scientific breakeven equivalent by 2026.
  • LM26 shortens the technical jump between General Fusionโ€™s planned commercial-scale machine and a commercial pilot plant. As a result, the company is fast-tracking its path to provide commercial fusion energy to the grid by the early to mid-2030s.

About General Fusion
General Fusion is pursuing a fast and practical approach to commercial fusion energy and is headquartered in Richmond, Canada. The company was established in 2002 and is funded by a global syndicate of leading energy venture capital firms, industry leaders, and technology pioneers. Learn more at www.generalfusion.com.

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1Zheng, Shanliang, and Thomas N. Todd. "Study of impacts on tritium breeding ratio of a fusion DEMO reactor." Fusion Engineering and Design 98 (2015): 1915-1918. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.fusengdes.2015.06.171


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