NY team confirms UCLA tabletop fusion

Science Gifts: Pirates of the Caribbean - The Curse of the Black PearlResearchers at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute have developed a tabletop accelerator that produces nuclear fusion at room temperature, providing confirmation of an earlier experiment conducted at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), while offering substantial improvements over the original design.

The device, which uses two opposing crystals to generate a powerful electric field, could potentially lead to a portable, battery-operated neutron generator for a variety of applications, from non-destructive testing to detecting explosives and scanning luggage at airports. The new results are described in the Feb. 10 issue of Physical Review Letters.

“Our study shows that ‘crystal fusion’ is a mature technology with considerable commercial potential,” says Yaron Danon, associate professor of mechanical, aerospace, and nuclear engineering at Rensselaer. “This new device is simpler and less expensive than the previous version, and it has the potential to produce even more neutrons.”

The device is essentially a tabletop particle accelerator. At its heart are two opposing “pyroelectric” crystals that create a strong electric field when heated or cooled. The device is filled with deuterium gas — a more massive cousin of hydrogen with an extra neutron in its nucleus. The electric field rips electrons from the gas, creating deuterium ions and accelerating them into a deuterium target on one of the crystals. When the particles smash into the target, neutrons are emitted, which is the telltale sign that nuclear fusion has occurred, according to Danon.

A research team led by Seth Putterman, professor of physics at UCLA, reported on a similar apparatus in 2005, but two important features distinguish the new device: “Our device uses two crystals instead of one, which doubles the acceleration potential,” says Jeffrey Geuther, a graduate student in nuclear engineering at Rensselaer and lead author of the paper. “And our setup does not require cooling the crystals to cryogenic temperatures — an important step that reduces both the complexity and the cost of the equipment.”

The new study also verified the fundamental physics behind the original experiment. This suggests that pyroelectric crystals are in fact a viable means of producing nuclear fusion, and that commercial applications may be closer than originally thought, according to Danon.

“Nuclear fusion has been explored as a potential source of power, but we are not looking at this as an energy source right now,” Danon says. Rather, the most immediate application may come in the form of a battery-operated, portable neutron generator. Such a device could be used to detect explosives or to scan luggage at airports, and it could also be an important tool for a wide range of laboratory experiments.

The concept could also lead to a portable x-ray generator, according to Danon. “There is already a commercial portable pyroelectric x-ray product available, but it does not produce enough energy to provide the 50,000 electron volts needed for medical imaging,” he says. “Our device is capable of producing about 200,000 electron volts, which could meet these requirements and could also be enough to penetrate several millimeters of steel.”

In the more distant future, Danon envisions a number of other medical applications of pyroelectric crystals, including a wearable device that could provide safe, continuous cancer treatment.

From Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute


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42 thoughts on “NY team confirms UCLA tabletop fusion”

  1. Hello There. I found your blog using msn. This is an extremely well
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  2. I think MIT should ask Elforsk how to make energy…

    Gorilla in the kitchen.
    Not even a blackswan, since all is public.

  3. That is true, you do have a point. Neutrons can be a very dangerous and mutilating form of alpha radiation, but who said these things would be put in televisions? Concrete and lead are pretty cheap on an individual household basis.

  4. Excuse me, but does this process produce helium at all? And if so, could a sizable quantity of helium be produced quickly and efficiently enough to fill a airship like a dirigible?

    and BTW IMO the best way to secure funding is to create a weapon first then use the profits to mass produce “butter” applications!

  5. This and the heating and cooling of crystals, both of which give off strong proton emmisions for just battery power, will gladly be developed as a weapon.

  6. Uh, fusing Bush and Sadaam together might make
    a more slicker, slippery kind of oil. We don’t
    need that! Isn’t it the goal of fusion to do
    away with old-fossil fuels like Bush and Sadaam?

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