# Polarized fusion, its Implications and plans for Direct Measurements in   a Tokamak

**Authors:** A.M. Sandorfi, A. Deur, C. Hanretty, G.L. Jackson, M. Lanctot, J. Liu,, M.M. Lowry, G.W. Miller, D. Pace, S.P. Smith, K. Wei, X. Wei, and X. Zheng

arXiv: 1703.06165 · 2017-03-21

## TL;DR

This paper discusses the potential of polarized fusion fuels in tokamaks, highlighting recent technological advances that enable direct measurements of polarization survival, which could significantly improve fusion efficiency and reactor longevity.

## Contribution

It introduces new experimental plans and technological developments for testing polarization survival in tokamak fusion, advancing the feasibility of polarized fuel applications.

## Key findings

- Simulations predict increased fusion cross section with polarized fuels.
- Technological advances now enable in situ polarization measurements.
- Potential for improved fusion efficiency and reactor lifespan.

## Abstract

A long-term energy option that is just approaching the horizon after decades of struggle, is fusion. Recent developments allow us to apply techniques from spin physics to advance its viability. The cross section for the primary fusion fuel in a tokamak reactor, D+T=>alpha+n, would be increased by a factor of 1.5 if the fuels were polarized. Simulations predict further non-linear power gains in large-scale machines such as ITER, due to increased alpha heating. These are significant enhancements that could lower the requirements needed to reach ignition and could be used to extend useful reactor life by compensating for neutron degradation. The potential realization rests on the survival of spin polarization for periods comparable to the energy containment time. Interest in polarized fuel options had an initial peak of activity in the 1980s, where calculations predicted that polarizations could in fact survive a plasma. However, concerns were raised regarding the cumulative impacts of fuel recycling from the reactor walls. In addition, the technical challenges of preparing and handling polarized materials prevented direct tests. Over the last several decades, this situation has changed dramatically. Detailed simulations of the ITER plasma have projected negligible wall recycling in a high power reactor. In addition, a combination of advances in three areas - polarized material technologies, polymer pellets developed for Inertial Confinement, and cryogenic injection guns developed for delivering fuel into the core of tokamaks - have matured to the point where a direct it in situ measurement is possible. A Jefferson Lab - DIII-D/General Atomics - University of Virginia collaboration is developing designs for a proof-of-principle polarization survival experiment using the isospin mirror reaction, D+3He=>alpha+p, at the DIII-D tokamak in San Diego.

## Full text

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## Figures

6 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1703.06165/full.md

## References

37 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1703.06165/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1703.06165