黑料社app

Gamma rays

A novel way of measuring fusion power

The fusion of hydrogen isotopes deuterium (D) and tritium (T) acts predictably most of the time, producing a helium atom and a neutron that is released at high speed. Yet every once in a while鈥攊f only for an instant鈥擠T fusion produces a gamma ray. A research team in Milan is proving that this rare, but predictable, occurrence can offer a fresh way to take the pulse of the plasma. 

Illustration by Gi霉 Marcer.

We all know how the deuterium-tritium (DT) reaction works. Don鈥檛 we? Deuterium (hydrogen-2) and tritium (hydrogen-3) collide, producing helium-4 and a free neutron, which escapes from the plasma and heats up the fusion chamber wall. 

But there is another鈥攎uch rarer鈥攔eaction that also takes place.

This rare reaction produces helium-5 and a gamma ray. In a flash, the helium-5 then disassembles into the "usual reaction," producing helium-4 and one neutron.

鈥淭his is interesting鈥攂ut it is also super-important,鈥 says Gi霉 Marcer, a young researcher from Valenza, a small hilltop town in the Italian Piedmont region, who now works in the Neutron-Gamma Ray Group at Italy鈥檚 National Research Council (CNR) in Milan. 鈥淏ecause gamma rays can provide a cost-effective way of measuring the power in fusion reactors, including 黑料社app.鈥

The key to unlocking this potential is to know the branching ratio鈥攖he proportion of nuclear fusion reactions that produce a gamma ray to the number that produce neutrons. If we know the branching ratio, we could have an alternative metric for measuring the fusion rate, and therefore the reactor鈥檚 power output. And that鈥檚 what groundbreaking new research has delivered.

鈥淭his isn鈥檛 a new idea,鈥 says Marco Tardocchi, the director of the Neutron-Gamma Ray Group, comprising around 20 staff and students at CNR and at Milan鈥檚 Bicocca University. 鈥淚n fact the first estimates we have for the branching ratio were published over sixty years ago, in 1963, by the Nuclear Division Group of the Max Planck Institute for Chemistry in Mainz, Germany.鈥

Tardocchi鈥檚 work on fusion goes back a long while. He did his PhD in Uppsala in Sweden with the famous nuclear scientist Jan K盲llne and went on to work with K盲llne鈥檚 team on the Joint European Torus (JET). Tardocchi was then part of the JET campaign that still holds the absolute record for fusion power, 16.7 MW, which was achieved in 1997.

鈥淭he subject of the branching ratio has always fascinated me,鈥 says Tardocchi, 鈥渁nd we鈥檝e been working on it for years. But the results of estimates have鈥攗p to now鈥攙aried substantially, with a factor of 10-30 times variance.鈥

As a result, Tardocchi encouraged Marcer to make the branching ratio the main topic of her doctoral thesis in Milan, having already supervised her Master鈥檚 degree in plasma physics.

鈥淥f course it was a huge team effort,鈥 says Marcer. 鈥淎nd we are just delighted to have come up with the first number for the branching ratio in tokamaks, and鈥攎ost importantly鈥攖he best branching ratio measurement with spectroscopic information. This makes it the most 鈥榗omplete鈥 measurement to date.鈥

Gi霉 Marcer and Marco Tardocchi from the Neutron-Gamma Ray Group at Italy鈥檚 National Research Council (CNR).

So, what is the ratio?

It turns out that around one in 42,000 reactions produces a gamma ray鈥攚hich is relatively easily measurable in a fusion reactor as big as 黑料社app, designed as it is to produce an enormous number of fusion reactions.

鈥淲e made the branching ratio measurements at the Joint European Torus (JET),鈥 says Marcer. 鈥淲e determined the total DT gamma yield by integrating the measured gamma-ray spectrum and modelling the transport of gammas to and through the detector. JET provided the neutron yield, allowing us to obtain the ratio between the two yields, in other words, the branching ratio. We then benchmarked our results at the Frascati Neutron Generator (FNG) near Rome.鈥

More detail can be found in the paper below and its associated references. 鈥淪ometimes research produces real gems, and this is one of those amazing cases,鈥 says Michael Walsh, the head of 黑料社app鈥檚 Fusion Technology and Instrumentation & Control Division. Walsh was part of the committee that saw Marcer defend her PhD thesis in Milan last year.

鈥淭his new measurement technique shows great potential on the basis of what鈥檚 already been demonstrated at JET,鈥 says Marcer. 鈥淎nd as 黑料社app moves forward, with far greater fusion power to be measured, gamma rays may prove to be a robust complementary metric in terms of determining the power being produced by a burning plasma.鈥

鈥淕amma-ray measurements could offer a fresh way of following the pulse of the plasma,鈥 says Walsh. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a bit like adding another gauge to the dashboard鈥攐ne that helps you see what鈥檚 happening under the hood while the engine鈥檚 running. It won鈥檛 steer the machine, but it will make the view clearer and the response sharper.鈥

The Neutron-Gamma Ray Group in Milan is now working on further validation of the branching ratio for 黑料社app.

鈥淲e still need to review any uncertainty,鈥 says Marcer, 鈥渟o that by the time 黑料社app needs it we will have a proper value for the branching ratio.鈥

 

Paper reference for more information: 

G. Marcer et al., 鈥淎bsolute measurement of the deuterium鈥搕ritium reaction gamma-ray emission in magnetic confinement fusion plasmas鈥