1. Skip to content
  2. Skip to main menu
  3. Skip to more DW sites

Fusion reactor

July 27, 2010

An international consortium of scientists hopes the ITER fusion reactor in France could usher in a new era of nuclear energy, although many are concerned about its rising costs and the prospect of more nuclear power.

https://p.dw.com/p/OVZZ
German nuclear physicist Norbert Holtkamp
German nuclear physicist Norbert Holtkamp is ITER's principal deputy director generalImage: ITER

Today and tomorrow, officials from ITER in Cadarache, France, just north of Marseille, are meeting to discuss the beginning of construction of the thermonuclear reactor, as well as its scope and cost. The reactor is a very expensive science experiment, whose overall cost has ballooned to an estimated 15 billion euros. The European Union is funding about 45 percent of the reactor, which, if successful when it comes online in eight years, could be the world's first energy-efficient nuclear fusion reactor. All electricity-generating nuclear power plants in the world are fission, rather than fusion, reactors. The project has many other international partners, including the United States, Japan, South Korea, Russia, India and China. Scientists believe a fusion reactor may lead to cheaper and safer nuclear energy. Deutsche Welle spoke with ITER's principal deputy director general, German nuclear physicist Norbert Holtkamp, who is responsible for the project's construction.

Deutsche Welle: Can you tell us what's going to be happening at the meeting?

Norbert Holtkamp: At the meeting, the different countries will reach a final agreement on what we call the inter-baseline (will be reached). The inter-baseline entails three central things: the scope, so what exactly we are building; the schedule, meaning the time frame we build it in; and the total costs.

In a tokamak, blanket modules coat the inside of the chamber and directly face the hot plasma
In a tokamak, blanket modules coat the inside of the chamber and directly face the hot plasma, like this one in the Tore Supra Tokamak also in Caradache, FranceImage: ITER

Can you give our audience a little bit of background on what the ITER reactor is and what a tokamak is?

The ITER is a tokamak, and a tokamak is a magnetic confinement device. What that means is big magnetic coils with very strong magnetic fields enclosing plasma. Through the plasma in the tokamak, one has to drive a very high current to heat up the plasma to 150 million degrees Celsius, which is about ten times the temperature of the sun's core. At this temperature the nuclei start to fuse. That's why it's called a fusion reactor. In the fusion process, energy is released (which we can use) later on to produce electricity.

Now how is this type of reactor different from the normal nuclear fission reactors we have here in Europe already?

This is a fusion process. So what we do is with light atoms, isotopes of hydrogen - deuterium and tritium - and they are in a gas. In this gas we drive the current and this drives the plasma. Fusion is a process where two nuclei melt together, and that releases energy in the form of very fast neutrons and helium. In a fission reactor, the nuclei are broken up and that also releases energy.

I understand that this is an experimental reactor, so is it going to be producing energy?

Well, it will produce energy, but we won't use this energy and make electricity out of it. The energy that we produce will be released into the atmosphere. We won't be using this energy in any commercial way. It's supposed to produce 10 times as much energy as we put into the plasma. That would be about 500 megawatts. That's quite a bit. About enough to feed a medium-sized city.

Where are you in the process of constructing this reactor?

In 2006, the ITER agreement was signed and those members are the European Commission, Russia, China, India, South Korea, Japan, and the United States. These are our partners. Since then we've built up the organization and the design. France, as the host country, is delivering the site, making sure the preparations are finished, including the roads and the harbor. The design is pretty much complete at this point and we have 60 percent of the total value of ITER under contract right now in the different countries that are delivering components to us. The countries don't give us money - they give us components, which is called "in-kind."

ITER illustration
The ITER will heat up the plasma to 150,000,000 degrees celsius - ten times higher the temperature of the sun's coreImage: ITER

What will this reactor do that the more traditional fission reactors can't do?

First of all, so far, the largest reactors, fusion reactors, that exist, one in the US, one in Japan, one in Europe, just has to use a Q of one. That means as much energy was produced as was put into the plasma. And that's only at 60 megawatts. ITER is the first fusion reactor that will produce much more energy than it uses. That still is a step that needs to be proven and there are scientific and technical questions that need to be answered and will be answered through the construction and operation of ITER.

The goal is no different than a fission reactor. The goal is to make energy. But fission reactors work today, we know that. There are plenty of them, especially in France, on the grid. Fusion reactors don't exist yet. So this is an important step to take.

Why does anybody want to do that? There's a variety of reasons. First of all, the fuel that is necessary is accessible almost everywhere in the world. Deuterium we can get from sea water, tritium is something that will be bred in the reactor itself. The process itself cannot go into a chain reaction. It cannot become uncontrolled by itself, very different from a fission reactor. So it's an intrinsically safe system. And while it does produce radioactive waste, the waste has a half life of 100 to 200 years after which the material can be re-used again. There are qualitative differences between a fusion and a fission reactor.

Why is the half life so much less in a fusion reactor than a fission reactor?

It has to do with the nuclear process. This waste is produced from an indirect process in which the neutron that comes from the fusion reaction flies into the walls of the fusion device and makes a nuclear reaction there. These nuclear reactions, indirectly, with the material that is selected specifically not to create longer waves, makes this material reactive. But the material lifetime, or the half life is on the order of 100 to 200 years. That's different from a fission reaction, in which you have uranium, plutonium which is a high-Z atom and when you break this up then you have isotopes that have a longer half life.

There has been some criticism, particularly from French groups like "Sortir du nucleaire" that have called for more research into green energy rather than more nuclear energy. How do you respond to this?

Some people think we shouldn't use nuclear power, any type of nuclear power. I certainly disagree with that given the challenges we face, not only in Europe, but worldwide. After all, we in Europe and Japan and the United States, we might be able to have enough power. But if you look on to some of the partners that we have, China, India, they have huge growth in the next coming 20 or 30 years if they want to sustain their economic growth. Today in China, every week or so, a big gigawatt coal-fired plant goes online. And sure we can burn up all the coal, or we can do something else and we believe that ITER can make a big contribution to this. We see this as economically viable and technically doable.

Interview: Cyrus Farivar
Editor: Sam Edmonds