Wr. Meier et Lm. Waganer, RECENT HEAVY-ION FUSION POWER-PLANT STUDIES IN THE US, Nuovo cimento della Società Italiana di Fisica. A. Nuclei, particles and fields, 106(12), 1993, pp. 1983-1995
The United States Department of Energy (DOE) sponsored two studies of
inertial fusion energy (IFE) electric power plants, one led by McDonne
ll Douglas Aerospace (MDA) and the other led by W. J. Schafer Associat
es (WJSA). These studies, which were completed in March of 1992, inclu
ded the conceptual design and analysis of two KrF-laser and two heavy-
ion-driven power plants. The reactor and driver designs for the heavy-
ion power plants are described in this paper. The MDA team design, Pro
metheus-H, features a wetted-wall chamber, a compact induction linac d
river, and channel propagation for beam delivery. The single-beam driv
er uses storage rings to accumulate a series of pulses before delivery
to the target. The use of storage rings and a folded linear section r
esults in a compact footprint and significant cost savings compared to
a straight multiple-beam linac. Fourteen beams of doubly-charged, 4 G
eV Pb ions are used to deliver ? MJ on the target at a pulse repetitio
n rate of 3.5 Hz with an overall driver efficiency of 21%. The channel
propagation mode requires only two small, diametrically opposed holes
through the blanket and first wall; this approach maximizes the wall
coverage and minimizes radiation leakage and contamination of the beam
lines. Th resulting target gain is 103 for a yield of 719 MJ per pulse
. The Prometheus chamber has a Pb-cooled, porous SiC first wall and a
He-cooled Li2O breeding blanket. The blanket structural material is lo
w-activation SiC. The thermal conversion efficiency is 43%, and the ne
t electric power is 1000 MWe. The WJSA team design, Osiris, uses a wet
ted-wall chamber, a multiple-beam induction linac driver, and ballisti
c focus with auto-neutralization. The driver design is conservative in
that it uses singly charged ions and does not use beam combination or
splitting. Twelve beams are close-packed in order to use common cores
and focusing magnets. The accelerator costs were reduced by operating
at space-charge-limited current density and standardizing the quadrup
ole and inductor designs. In this case, twelve beams of 3.8 GeVXe ions
provide a total of 5 MJ at a pulse repetition rate of 4.6 Hz. The ove
rall driver efficiency is 28%, the target gain is 87, and the yield is
432 MJ per pulse. The Osiris chamber uses a flexible, porous carbon/c
arbon fabric to contain the flow of the molten salt Flibe, which serve
s as the primary coolant and breeding material. The vacuum vessel stru
cture is a carbon/carbon composite. The thermal conversion efficiency
is 45%, and the net electric power is 1000 MWe.