RF plugging of multi-mirror machines
Tal Miller, Ilan Be'ery, Eli Gudinetsky, Ido Barth

TL;DR
This paper proposes an RF plugging method for multi-mirror fusion systems that significantly enhances confinement time, potentially enabling smaller, more feasible fusion reactors by exploiting Doppler-shifted RF fields to reduce particle outflow.
Contribution
It introduces a novel RF electric field technique that selectively traps escaping particles, leading to exponential improvements in confinement time in multi-mirror fusion devices.
Findings
Confinement time scales exponentially with the number of mirror cells using RF plugging.
RF plugging can satisfy the Lawson criterion with a reasonable system size.
The semi-kinetic model quantifies RF effects on particle trapping efficiency.
Abstract
One of the main challenges of fusion reactors based on magnetic mirrors is the axial particle loss through the loss cones. In multi-mirror (MM) systems, the particle loss is addressed by adding mirror cells on each end of the central fusion cell. Coulomb collisions in the MM sections serve as the retrapping mechanism for the escaping particles. Unfortunately, the confinement time in this system only scales linearly with the number of cells in the MM sections and requires an unreasonably large number of cells to satisfy the Lawson criterion. Here, it is suggested to reduce the outflow by applying a traveling RF electric field that mainly targets the particles in the outgoing loss cone. The Doppler shift compensates for the detuning of the RF frequency from the ion cyclotron resonance mainly for the escaping particles resulting in a selectivity effect. The transition rates between the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMagnetic confinement fusion research · Fusion materials and technologies · Astro and Planetary Science
