Lithium enrichment threatens to curb fusion deployment
Samuel H. Ward, Richard J. Pearson, Thomas B. Scott, Niek J. Lopes Cardozo

TL;DR
Lithium isotopic enrichment is a critical, costly barrier to fusion energy deployment, requiring innovative solutions to reduce costs, environmental risks, and supply chain issues.
Contribution
The paper analyzes lithium enrichment challenges and proposes strategies to mitigate costs and environmental risks in fusion reactor designs.
Findings
Enrichment costs significantly impact fusion capital costs.
Current enrichment technologies are expensive, not scalable, and environmentally risky.
Breeding blankets using natural lithium could bypass enrichment challenges.
Abstract
The impact of lithium isotopic enrichment on the global deployment of nuclear fusion energy is analysed. Lithium - the 6Li isotope in particular - is essentially one of two elemental fuels required by fusion reactors for tritium breeding. Whilst variable consumption of lithium is low enough to present negligible cost, it is instead the large stored inventory volume (50-100 tonnes) and its required enrichment that compound to significantly drive capital costs. These costs are driven by the inefficiency of the tritium breeding process, making this challenge fundamental to almost all fusion power plant concepts. Financing would further compound these effects, making lithium fusion fuels more akin to an upfront capital expenditure than operational expenditure. Other potential barriers to fusion deployment created by lithium are also discussed: enrichment technologies of today are shown to…
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