This week we got deep analysis of possible #FusionEnergy cost valuation with @JesseJenkins in the authors' list!🙀🙀🙀
While it is difficult to determine cost of a particular design when much of underlying fusion technology has yet to be developed, it is possible to set cost targets by determining the value of a design with a particular set of operational parameters in a simulated future scenario
This is the first study of the equilibrium value of fusion at various levels of capacity penetration for the United States, and the first investigation of the value of integrated thermal storage for fusion plants in an hourly model
Authors developed an abstracted operational model for a fusion plant and linearized it for implementation in GenX, a linear programming electricity system capacity expansion model
The model is based on a pulsed tokamak, since tokamaks are the most mature concept
They used GenX to study the value and role of fusion in a decarbonized electricity system circa the 2040s, optimizing electricity technology investments and hourly operation across 20 model zones to minimize total system cost
In order to understand the design space of model tokamaks, athours varied tokamaks' behavior from pulsed to nearly steady-state, and varied the variable operations and maintenance cost to reflect uncertainty in the costs of replaceable components such as the blanket and divertor
Authors determined cost thresholds as function of capacity penetration for a range of plants in three main scenarios
The pulsed tokamak designs studied range from pessimistic to optimistic
While all plants use the same parameters for their power conversion systems, the fusion cores have different operational constraints and costs described in the table above
The three scenarios, termed low, medium, and high fusion market opportunity, differ in the cost of fusion’s competitor technologies and quantity of flexible loads in the system, but all have identical nominal loads, with average and peak values of 600 GW and 1100 GW, respectively
Figure shows the cost thresholds for a marginal plant for each plant designs in each scenario, as the fusion capacity penetration is set from 10 GW to 350 GW
This figure shows how cost thresholds for fusion at various capacity penetrations vary between the 3 main scenarios with the cost of other resources
Particularly at low fusion capacity penetrations, the cost of fission strongly affects the potential value of fusion
NG-CCS = natural gas generation + carbon capture&storage
Pulsed tokamak designs may require intermediate thermal storage system (TSS) to supply power conversion system (PCS) with heat during dwell period; PCS typically cannot handle sudden decline in heat as end of the fusion pulse
these systems store few minutes of heat
f.e.
Authors independently optimize the core capacity, storage energy capacity, and PCS generation capacity in each model zone
This allows for generators to be oversized relative to their fusion cores, in order to serve a peak in demand
The option to build storage is more valuable at lower fusion capacity penetrations because the optimal storage quantity per plant is larger
This suggests that a TSS could be especially valuable for the first generation of fusion plants
As fusion penetration increases and the total thermal storage capacity along with it, the marginal value per unit of additional storage capacity declines
Thermal storage modifies the operational patterns of the cores and PCSs and increases the utilization of the plants
The optimal thermal storage system (TSS) duration generally ranges from 2 h to 8 h, depending foremost on the storage capacity cost,...
...and the optimized generator capacity generally ranges from 1.1 to 1.35 of the amount needed to serve the fusion cores without storage
The TSS increases the value of the fusion core capacity by $490/kW, about 20%, as it increases its annual utilization from 87% to 93%, and increases the net output of the plant from 82% to 90% of its potential
Optimal hourly operational behavior of the fusion cores and PCSs for plants with pessimistic cores with and without a TSS option, in a typical geographic region of a medium market opportunity scenario with a total system fusion capacity of 100 GW
Part (a) shows load in zone, parts (b) and (d) shows thermal power output of core normalized by its peak power, parts (c) and (f) show net generation of plant normalized by its long-run capacity, and part (e) shows state of energy storage in the TSS measured in hours of the peak
value of fusion plant depends strongly on its marginal cost of net power generation, so fusion developers must take into account costs of operating and maintaining future reactors, not only the capital cost
Plant value depends only weakly on the particulars of an hourly-scale pulse cycle when examined with an hourly resolution
This study finds that equilibrium capacity penetration of fusion increases significantly with relatively small decreases in cost of marginal plant
This suggests that if cost targets for initial market penetration can be met, further cost decreases could allow fusion to reach a much higher capacity
Finally, integrated thermal storage such as molten salt increases the plant value by a modest amount, by better serving daily demand cycles It would be especially valuable while the total fusion capacity is small, which could help fusion find an initial market
The value of fusion energy to a decarbonized United States electric grid
Foresight study on the worldwide developments in advancing #FusionEnergy, including the small scale private initiatives
This study provides an analysis of the leading public and private fusion initiatives globally which has been used to generate 4 foresight scenarios for fusion development
The study provides a picture of the most common challenges and barriers to fusion development as well
The most critical aspect of tokamak power plants is their pulsed duty cycle, which includes long plasma-burn phases followed by fast dwells to remove ashes and dusts from the reactor chamber and re-load the central solenoid
Stellarators with blankets utilizing Pb-17Li as breeder and coolant can reach a maximum operating temperature of 1100 °C
This allows to reach a high power conversion efficiency, due to possible coupling with a Brayton–Rankine Combined Cycle (CC)
Let's talk about fundamentals of #FusionEnergy: plasma energy balance and Lawson criterion
Plasma energy balance is determined by the energy sources feeding the plasma and the energy losses cooling it down
For the plasma to remain stationary, the energy balance must be in equilibrium, i.e. the sources must compensate the losses
The total power produced by the D-T fusion reaction Pfusion is divided between the products of the reaction, the alpha particles, i.e. the helium nuclei (He), and the neutrons
Exascale supercomputers are exactly what current fusion research needs, explains Dr. Choongseok “CS” Chang, lead PI of multi-institutional multi-disciplinary U.S. SciDAC Partnership Center for High-fidelity Boundary Plasma Simulation, headquartered at @PPPLab
One of the biggest current challenges is making accurate predictions about the processes that occur inside tokamak reactors, which use giant magnetic fields to confine plasma fuel in a torus shape to achieve the conditions necessary for fusion
To advance this science, Chang’s team is preparing to use the Aurora Exascale supercomputer, the country’s first Intel-architecture-based exascale HPC system that will be deployed at the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Argonne National Laboratory
Radiative pulsed L-mode operation in ARC-class reactors - fresh one from @CFS_energy and @MIT_Fusion
Enhanced confinement & internal transport barriers create large pressure gradients providing significant bootstrap current fractions. High confinement time allows minimization of plasma current improving stability while also reducing external current drive requirements needed
Recently, high temperature superconductor (HTS) technology has dramatically increased achievable on-axis magnetic field in reactor designs. Since fusion power density scales, this technological advancement provides opportunities to improve self-consistent reactor scenarios