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  • When it comes to making energy, nuclear fusion is the ultimate goal.

  • It holds the promise of clean limitless energy that's available on demand.

  • But of course, it isn't easy, and despite several different promising methods

  • we still haven't achieved sustained fusion.

  • But in April of 2020, NASA researchers announced they had come up with a new approach to fusion

  • that has the potential to power missions into deep space,

  • and maybe even future laptops here on Earth.

  • Unlike nuclear fission, where heavy atoms are split to generate energy,

  • fusion is accomplished by smashing lighter elements together so they combine.

  • It's the process that powers our Sun,

  • as hydrogen nuclei in its core crash into each other and eventually, create helium

  • through what's known as the proton-proton chain.

  • But the only reason our sun and other stars can pull off this trick is because of their massive size.

  • They need to be so huge that gravity creates enough pressure and heat to make those hydrogen nuclei collide.

  • Remember, a hydrogen nucleus is really just a proton, and protons are positively charged.

  • To make two of them collide, they have to overcome their mutual repulsion for each other, known as the Coulomb barrier.

  • It's kind of like making the like sides of two magnets touch,

  • except the magnets are the size of a subatomic particle and they need to touch so hard they bind together.

  • So how do you do it, without getting enough hydrogen together to form a star, that is?

  • Well, one approach is suspending fuel in a complex magnetic field

  • and heating it until it's hotter than in the center of the Sun,

  • stripping electrons from the hydrogen nuclei and creating plasma.

  • This is known as magnetic confinement fusion.

  • Reactors that use this approach, like tokamaks and stellarators, currently have trouble keeping the plasma stable and burning.

  • Another method is to shoot a powerful laser pulse at a fuel source like deuterium,

  • which is an isotope of hydrogen that has a neutron and a proton in the nucleus.

  • Hurdles like distributing the laser energy and engineering a precise enough fuel target

  • have so far kept us from achieving ignition with this method known as inertial confinement fusion.

  • So scientists led in part by a team from NASA's Glenn Research Center explored another path called lattice confinement fusion.

  • They used the atoms of a solid piece of metal like erbium or titanium

  • as a lattice and crammed the spaces in between with deuterium gas

  • until the lattice started to break apart.

  • Eventually, the whole thing was so full of deuterium

  • one researcher described it as more like a powder than a lump of metal.

  • Then it needed a kick to get fusion going.

  • Said kick was provided by a beam of high energy gamma rays,

  • which can split a deuterium nucleus into an energetic proton and neutron on contact.

  • When the neutron smacked into another deuterium atom,

  • it accelerated it fast enough to overcome the electrostatic repulsion and fuse with another deuterium nucleus.

  • The clever thing about lattice confinement fusion is it reaches the energy needed

  • to overcome the Coulomb barrier more easily.

  • The negatively charged electrons in the erbium or titanium

  • effectively shield the deuterium nuclei from each other until just before the collision,

  • kind of like when you're driving up to an intersection and don't see a stop sign hidden behind a tree until the last minute.

  • When two deuterium nuclei fuse,

  • they can either produce a proton and an isotope of hydrogen with two neutrons called tritium,

  • or helium-3 and another energetic neutron that can continue the reaction.

  • Of course, the fast moving deuterium could also collide with the lattice, but even that could produce usable energy.

  • NASA is interested in this technology as a possible power source for deep space missions,

  • with researchers imagining fusion powering spacecraft for 10 to 30 years,

  • while saving weight and cost by reducing the need for shielding.

  • Fusion power would also revolutionize energy here on Earth,

  • and one researcher proposed this technology could power individual homes

  • or even laptops if it could be made small enough.

  • But that is a long, long way off.

  • Researchers have shown that this method can fuse atoms,

  • next they need to see if they can make the process more consistent and efficient.

  • It sounds promising, but until more breakthroughs are made we'll just have to keep relying on our sun for nuclear fusion.

  • Before sustainable fusion power becomes a reality on Earth, nuclear fission still has its uses.

  • Is one of those uses on a boat as a floating power plant?

  • Russia seems to think so.

  • For more on their floating planet and whether or not it's a good idea, check out my video on it here.

  • Did you know books on nuclear power come in two varieties?

  • Fission and non-fission.

  • If you hated that joke be sure to leave a comment, if you liked it subscribe because there will be more jokes.

  • Thanks for watching and I'll see you next time on Seeker.

When it comes to making energy, nuclear fusion is the ultimate goal.

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