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:''Not to be confused with the [[spherical tokamak]], another topic in fusion research.''


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A '''spheromak''' is an arrangement of [[plasma (physics)|plasma]] formed into a [[toroid]]al shape similar to a [[smoke ring]].<ref>Arnie Heller, [https://www.llnl.gov/str/Hill.html "Experiment Mimics Nature's Way with Plasmas"], Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory</ref> The spheromak contains large internal [[electrical current]]s and their associated [[magnetic field]]s arranged so the [[magnetohydrodynamic]] forces within the spheromak are nearly balanced, resulting in long-lived ([[microsecond]]) confinement times without external fields. Spheromak belongs to a type of plasma configuration referred to as the [[compact toroid]]s.
 
The physics of the spheromak and their collisions is similar to a variety of astrophysical events, like [[coronal loop]]s and [[Solar prominence|filaments]], [[relativistic jet]]s and [[plasmoid]]s. They are particularly useful for studying magnetic reconnection events, when two or more spheromaks collide. Spheromaks are easy to generate using a "gun" that ejects spheromaks off the end of an [[electrode]] into a holding area, called the [[flux]] conserver. This has made them useful in the laboratory setting, and spheromak guns are relatively common in [[astrophysics]] labs. These devices are often, confusingly, referred to simply as "spheromaks" as well; the term has two meanings.
 
Spheromaks have been proposed as a [[magnetic fusion energy]] concept due to their long [[confinement time]]s, which was on the same order as the best [[tokamak]]s when they were first studied. Although they had some successes during the 1970s and 80s, these small and lower-energy devices had limited performance and most spheromak research ended when fusion funding was dramatically curtailed in the late 1980s. However, in the late 1990s research demonstrated that hotter spheromaks have better confinement times, and this led to a second wave of spheromak machines Spheromaks have also been used to inject plasma into a bigger magnetic confinement experiment like a [[tokamak]].<ref>M. R. Brown and P. M. Bellan, [http://prl.aps.org/abstract/PRL/v64/i18/p2144_1 "Current drive by spheromak injection into a tokamak"], Phys. Rev. Lett. 64, 2144–2147 (1990)</ref>
 
==History==
The spheromak has undergone several distinct periods of investigation, with the greatest efforts during the 1980s, and a reemergence in the 2000s.
 
===Background work in astrophysics===
A key concept in the understanding of the spheromak is [[magnetic helicity]], a value <math>H</math> that describes the "twistedness" of the magnetic field in a plasma.
 
The earliest work on these concepts was developed by [[Hannes Alfvén]] in 1943,<ref name=b6>{{harvnb|Bellan|2000|p=6}}</ref> which won him the 1970 [[Nobel Prize in Physics]]. His development of the concept of [[Alfvén wave]]s explained the long-duration dynamics of plasma as [[electric current]]s traveling within them produced [[magnetic field]]s which, in a fashion similar to a [[dynamo]], gave rise to new currents. In 1950, Lundquist experimentally studied Alfvén waves in [[Mercury (element)|mercury]] and introduced the characterizing [[Lundquist number]], which describes the plasma's conductivity. In 1958, Woltjer, working on astrophysical plasmas, noted that <math>H</math> is conserved, which implies that a twisty field will attempt to maintain its twistyness even with external forces being applied to it.<ref name=h3>{{harvnb|Hooper|et al.|1998|p=3}}</ref>
 
Starting in 1959, Alfvén and a team including Lindberg, Mitlid and Jacobsen built a device to create balls of plasma for study. This device was identical to modern "coaxial injector" devices (see below) and the experimenters were surprised to find a number of interesting behaviors. Among these was the creation of stable rings of plasma. In spite of their many successes, in 1964 the researchers turned to other areas and the injector concept lay dormant for two decades.<ref name=b7-8>{{harvnb|Bellan|2000|pp=7-8}}</ref>
 
===Background work in fusion===
In 1951 the first major efforts to produce controlled fusion for power production started in earnest. These early experiments generally used some sort of pulsed power to deliver the large magnetic forces required in the experiments. The magnitude of these currents and the forces that they produced were unprecedented. In 1957 [[Harold Furth]], Levine, and Waniek published a paper on the dynamics of large magnets, which demonstrated that the limiting factor in magnet performance was physical; stresses in the magnet would overcome its own mechanical limits. They proposed winding these magnets in such a way that the forces within the magnet windings cancelled out, the "force-free condition". Although it was not known at the time, this is the same magnetic field as in a spheromak.<ref name=b7> {{harvnb|Bellan|2000|p=7}}</ref>
 
In 1957 the [[ZETA]] machine started operation in the [[UK]]. ZETA was at that time by far the largest and most powerful fusion device in the world. It operated until 1968, by which point many devices matched its size. During its operation, the experimental team noticed that on occasion the plasma would maintain confinement long after the experimental run had ostensibly ended, although this was not studied in depth at the time. Years later in 1974, [[John Bryan Taylor]] made great strides in characterizing these self-stable plasmas, which he called "quiescent". He developed the [[Taylor state]] equilibrium concept, a state of plasma that conserves helicity in its lowest possible energy state. This led to a re-awakening of [[compact torus]] research.<ref name=b9>{{harvnb|Bellan|2000|p=9}}</ref>
 
In the aftermath of ZETA the "classical" [[z-pinch]] concept fell from favour, and the newer [[theta-pinch]] saw a reduced level of activity. While working on such a machine in the early 1960s, one designed with a conical pinch area, Bostick and Wells found that the machine sometimes created stable rings of plasma.<ref>Winston Bostick and Daniel Wells, "Azimuthal Magnetic Field in the Conical Theta Pinch", ''Physics of Fluids'', Volume 6 Issue 9, (September 1963), pg. 1325-1331</ref> A series of machines to study the problem followed, and in one of these magnetic probe measurements found the toroidal magnetic field profile of a spheromak; the toroidal field was zero on axis, rose to a maximum at some interior point, and then went to zero at the wall.<ref name=b9/> However, the theta-pinch failed to reach the high-energy conditions needed for fusion, and interest in the system waned. In spite of these tantalizing hints of interesting behaviour, most work on theta-pinch had ended by the 1970s.
 
===The golden age===
The key concept in [[magnetic fusion energy]] (MFE) is the [[Lawson criterion]], a combination of the plasma temperature, density and confinement time.<ref>J. D. Lawson, "Some Criteria for a Power Producing Thermonuclear Reactor", Proceedings of the Physical Society B, Volume 70 Issue 1 (January 1957), p. 6</ref> Fusion devices generally fell into two classes, pulsed machines like the [[z-pinch]] that attempted to reach high densities and temperatures but only for microseconds, while steady state concepts such as the [[stellarator]] and [[magnetic mirror]] attempted to reach the Lawson criterion through longer confinement times.
 
Taylor's work suggested that the self-stable plasmas would be a simple way to approach the problem along the confinement time axis. Taylor's work sparked a new round of theoretical developments. In 1979 Rosenbluth and Bussac published a paper describing generalizations of Taylor's work, including a spherical minimum energy state having zero toroidal field on the bounding surface.<ref>M. N. Rosenbluth and M. N. Bussac, "MHD Stability of Spheromak", ''Nuclear Fusion'', Volume 19 (1979), pg. 489</ref> This means that there is no externally driven current on the device axis and so there are no external toroidal field coils. It appeared that this approach would allow for fusion reactors of greatly simpler design than the predominant [[stellarator]] and [[tokamak]] approaches.
 
Several experimental devices emerged almost overnight. Wells, recognizing his earlier experiments as examples of these plasmas, was now at the [[University of Miami]] and started gathering funding for a new device combining two of his earlier conical theta-pinch systems, which emerged as [[Trisops]]. In Japan, [[Nihon University]] built the PS-1, which used a combination of theta and zeta pinches to produce spheromaks. [[Harold Furth]] was excited by the prospect of a less-expensive solution to the confinement issue, and started the S1 at the [[Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory]], which used inductive heating. Many of these early experiments were summarized by Furth in 1983.<ref name=b12>{{harvnb|Bellan|2000|p=12}}</ref>
 
These early MFE experiments culminated in the [[Compact Torus Experiment]] (CTX) at [[Los Alamos National Laboratory|Los Alamos]]. This was this era's largest and most powerful device, generating spheromaks with surface currents of 1 MA, temperatures of 100 eV, and peak electron betas over 20%.<ref name=h4>{{harvnb|Hooper|et al.|1998|p=4}}</ref> CTX also experimented with methods to re-introduce energy into the fully formed spheromak in order to counter losses at the surface. In spite of these early successes, by the late 1980s the [[tokamak]] had surpassed the confinement times of the spheromaks by orders of magnitude. For example [[Joint European Torus|JET]] was achieving confinement times on the order of 1 second.<ref>P.H. Rebut et al, [http://fire.pppl.gov/rebut_mod_strategy.pdf "A program toward a fusion reactor"], ''Physics of Fluids B'', Volume 3 Number 8 (August 1991), pg. 2210</ref>
 
The major event that ended most spheromak work was not technical; funding for the entire US fusion program was dramatically curtailed in FY86, and many of the "alternate approaches", which includes spheromaks, were defunded. Existing experiments in the US continued until their funding ran out, while smaller programs elsewhere, notably in Japan and the new [[SPHEX]] machine in the UK, continued from 1979-1997. CTX gained additional funding from the Defence Department and continued experiments until 1990; the last runs improved temperatures to 400 eV,<ref name=handb/> and confinement times on the order of 3&nbsp;ms.<ref>"Physics through the 1990s", National Academies Press, 1986, pg. 198</ref>
 
===Astrophysics===
The data and theory from these experiments did not go to waste; through the early 1990s their work was widely used by the [[astrophysics]] community to explain various events and the spheromak was studied as an add-on to existing MFE devices.
 
D.M. Rust and A. Kumar were particularly active in using spheromak-related concepts of magnetic helicity and relaxation to study solar prominences.<ref>[http://sd-www.jhuapl.edu/FlareGenesis/Team/Dave/Recent_Pubs.html "Publications for the years"]</ref> Similar work was carried out at Caltech by Bellan and Hansen at [[Caltech]],<ref>Freddy Hansen and Paul Bellan, [http://iopscience.iop.org/1538-4357/563/2/L183/15416.text.html "Experimental Demonstration of How Strapping Fields Can Inhibit Solar Prominence Eruptions"], ''The Astrophysical Journal'', 563:L183-L186 (12 December 2001)</ref> and the [http://plasma.swarthmore.edu/SSX/index.html Swarthmore Spheromak Experiment] (SSX) project at [[Swarthmore College]].
 
===Fusion accessory===
Some MFE work continued through this period, almost all of it using spheromaks as accessory devices for other reactors. Caltech and [[INRS-EMT]] in Canada both used accelerated spheromaks as a way to refuel tokamaks.<ref name=b13/> Others studied the use of spheromaks to inject helicity into tokamaks, eventually leading to the [[Helicity Injected Spherical Torus]] (HIST) device and similar concepts for a number of existing devices.<ref>[http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/11/101108071912.htm "Getting to Know the Sun Advances Fusion Research: Coaxial Helicity Injection Could Make Fusion Reactors Cheaper"], 9 November 2010</ref>
 
===Defence===
 
Hammer, Hartman et al. showed that spheromaks could be accelerated to extremely high velocities using a [[railgun]], and this led to several proposed uses. Among these was the use of such plasmas as "bullets" to fire at incoming [[warhead]]s with the hope that the associated electrical currents would disrupt its electronics. This led to experiments on the [[Shiva Star]] system, although these were cancelled in the mid-1990s.<ref>''Jane's Defence Weekly'', 29 July 1998</ref><ref>Graham  et all,[http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/Xplore/login.jsp?url=http%3A%2F%2Fieeexplore.ieee.org%2Fiel4%2F5783%2F15430%2F00733452.pdf%3Farnumber%3D733452&authDecision=-203 "Shiva Star - Marauder Compact Torus System"], 16-19 Jun 1991, pg. 990-993</ref>
 
===Other domains===
Other proposed uses included firing spheromaks at metal targets to generate intense [[X-ray]] flashes as a backlighting source for other experiments.<ref name=b13> {{harvnb|Bellan|2000|p=13}}</ref>In the late 1990s spheromak concepts were applied towards the study of fundamental plasma physics, notably [[magnetic reconnection]].<ref name=b13/> Dual-spheromak machines were built at the [[University of Tokyo]], [[Princeton University|Princeton]] (MRX) and [[Swarthmore College]].
 
===Rebirth in MFE===
Then, in 1994, fusion history repeated itself. T. Kenneth Fowler was summarizing the results from CTX's experimental runs in the 1980s when he noticed that the confinement time was proportional to the temperature of the plasma.<ref name=b13/> This is unexpected; the [[ideal gas law]] generally states that higher temperatures in a given confinement area will lead to higher density and pressure. In conventional devices such as the tokamak this increased temperature/pressure increases turbulence that dramatically ''lowers'' confinement time. If the spheromak really did give improved confinement with increased temperature, this would be enormously important. A series of similar papers followed, all of which suggested that there might be a "fast path" to an ignition-level spheromak reactor.<ref>E. B. Hooper, J. H. Hammer, C. W. Barnes, J. C. Fern ́andez and F. J. Wysocki, “A Re-examination of Spheromak Experiments and Opportunities”, ''Fusion Technology'', Volume 29 (1996), pg. 191</ref><ref>E. B. Hooper and T. K. Fowler, “Spheromak Reactor: Physics Opportunities and Issues”, ''Fusion Technology'', Volume 30 (1996), og. 1390</ref>
 
The promise was so great that several new MFE experiments started to study these issues. Notable among these is the [[Sustained Spheromak Physics Experiment]] (SSPX) at LLNL, which is studying the problems of generating long-life spheromaks through electrostatic injection of additional helicity. It remains unclear whether or not the spheromak can reach a suitable combination of confinement time and temperature to make a practical fusion reactor.<ref>[http://www.mfescience.org/sspx/ "SSPX - Sustained Spheromak Physics Experiment"], Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory</ref>
 
== Theory ==
Force free plasma vortices have uniform [[magnetic helicity]] and therefore are stable against many instabilities. Typically, the current decays faster in the colder regions until the gradient in helicity is large enough to allow a turbulent redistribution of the current.
 
Force free vortices follow the following equations.
 
:<math>\begin{align}
\vec{\nabla} \times \vec{B} &= \alpha\vec{B} \\
  \vec{v}                    &= \pm\beta\vec{B}
\end{align}</math>
 
The first equation describes a [[Lorentz force]]-free fluid: the <math> \vec{j} \times \vec{B} </math> forces are everywhere zero. For a laboratory plasma α is a constant and β is a scalar function of spatial coordinates.
 
Note that, unlike most plasma structures, the [[Lorentz force]] and the [[Magnus effect|Magnus force]], <math> \rho\vec{\nabla} \times \vec{v} </math>, play equivalent roles. <math>\rho </math> is the mass density.
 
The magnetic flux surfaces in a spheromak are toroidal, with the current being totally [[Toroidal and poloidal|toroidal]] at the core of the torus and totally [[Toroidal and poloidal|poloidal]] at the surface of the torus. This is similar to the field configuration of a [[tokamak]], except that the field-producing coils are simpler and do not penetrate the plasma torus.
 
Spheromaks are subject to external forces, notably the thermal gradient between the hot plasma and its cooler surroundings. Generally this leads to a loss of energy at the outer surface of the spheromak though [[black body radiation]], leading to a thermal gradient in the spheromak itself. Electrical current travels slower in the cooler sections, eventually leading to a redistribution of energy inside, and turbulence eventually destroys the spheromak.
 
==Creating spheromaks==
Spheromaks form naturally under a variety of conditions, enabling them to be generated in a number of ways. These devices are also sometimes referred to as spheromaks.<ref>What, pg. 1</ref>
 
The most common modern device is the "Marshall gun" or "injector".<ref name=handb>{{harvnb|Hooper| Barnes|1996}}</ref> The device consists of two closed cylinders, one inside the other. The inner cylinder is shorter, leaving an empty space at the bottom.<ref name=p5>Path, pg. 5</ref> An electromagnet inside the inner cylinder is used to set up an initial field. The field is similar to the one from a [[bar magnet]], running vertically down the center of the inner cylinder and up the outside of the apparatus. The magnet is positioned so that the area where the field loops over from the center to outside, where the field lines are roughly horizontal, is aligned with the bottom of the inner cylinder.
 
A small puff of gas is introduced to the area between the cylinders. A large electric charge supplied by a [[capacitor]] bank is applied across the cylinders, ionizing the gas. Currents induced in the resulting plasma interact with the original magnetic field, generating a [[Lorentz force]] that pushes the plasma away from the inner cylinder, into the empty area. After a short period the plasma stabilizes into a spheromak.<ref name=p6>Path, pg. 6</ref>
 
Other common devices include open-ended or conical [[theta-pinch]], where they were first researched in depth, and machines that generate them magnetically in a steady state.
 
Since the spheromak's magnetic confinement is self-generated, no external magnet coils are required. However, the spheromak does experience the "tilting perturbation" that allows it to rotate within the confinement area. This can be addressed with external magnets, but more often the confinement area is wrapped in a conductor, typically [[copper]]. When the edge of the spheromak torus approaches the concudtive surface, a current is induced into it that, through [[Lenz's law]], reacts to push the spheromak back into the center of the chamber.
 
It is also possible to get the same effect with a single conductor running down the center of the chamber, through the "hole" in the center of the spheromak.<ref>Paul Czysz and Claudio Bruno, "Future Spacecraft Propulsion Systems", Springer, 2009, pg. 529</ref> As this conductor's currents are self-generated, it adds little complexity to the design. However, stability can be further improved by running an external current in the central conductor. As the current scales up it approaches the conditions of a traditional tokamak, but in a much smaller size and simpler form. This evolution led to considerable research on the [[spherical tokamak]] during the 1990s.
 
==See also==
* [[field-reversed configuration]], a similar concept
* [[spherical tokamak]], essentially a spheromak formed around a central conductor/magnet
* [[List of plasma (physics) articles]]
 
==References==
===Notes===
{{reflist|2}}
 
===Bibliography===
* (''Spheromak master bibliography''), [http://www.woodruffscientific.com/SpheromakMaster.html "Spheromak master bibliography"]
* {{cite book|first=Paul|last=Bellan |title=Spheromaks |publisher=Imperial College Press |year=2000 |ISBN=978-1-86094-141-2 |ref=harv}}
* {{cite web|first1=E. Bickford  |last1=Hooper |first2=Cris |last2=Barnes |url=http://www-ferp.ucsd.edu/PUBLIC/AC-PANEL/REC-DOCS/W-PAPERS/spher.html |title=The Spheromak - An Alternative MFE Concept and Plasma Science Experiment |date=23/24 April 1996 |ref=harv}}
* {{cite web|first=E.B. |last=Hooper |last2=et al. |url=http://www.osti.gov/bridge/purl.cover.jsp?purl=/304511-FwbU8y/webviewable/ |title=The Spheromak Path to Fusion Energy"] |publisher=Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory |date=April 1998  |ref=harv}}
* (''Caltech''), [http://ve4xm.caltech.edu/Bellan_plasma_page/spheroma.htm "Spheromaks"], Caltech
* (''Path''), [http://www.mfescience.org/sspx/pdfs/spheromakfusion.pdf "Spheromak Path to Fusion"], Fusion Energy Program, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
* (''What''), [http://www.mfescience.org/sspx/pdfs/whatis-v2.pdf "What is a spheromak?"], Fusion Energy Program, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
 
== External links ==
* [http://ve4xm.caltech.edu/Bellan_plasma_page/spheroma.htm Spheromak activity] at [[Caltech]]
* [http://plasma.physics.swarthmore.edu/SSX/index.html The Swarthmore Spheromak Experiment] and its [http://plasma.physics.swarthmore.edu/SSX/faq.html FAQ]
* About the [[Sustained Spheromak Physics Experiment|SSPX]] at [[Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory]]
** [http://crppwww.epfl.ch/~duval/P5_047.pdf#search='spheromak' ''Route to higher temperatures by current amplification in the Sustained Spheromak Physics Experiment (SSPX)''] (PDF)
** [http://www.llnl.gov/str/Hill.html "Experiment Mimics Nature's Way With Plasmas"], December 1999
** [http://www.llnl.gov/str/September05/Hill.html "A Dynamo Of A Plasma"], September 2005
 
{{use dmy dates|date=April 2011}}
 
{{Fusion methods}}
{{Nuclear fusion reactors}}
 
[[Category:Fusion power]]
[[Category:Plasma physics]]

Revision as of 12:30, 5 December 2013

Not to be confused with the spherical tokamak, another topic in fusion research.

A spheromak is an arrangement of plasma formed into a toroidal shape similar to a smoke ring.[1] The spheromak contains large internal electrical currents and their associated magnetic fields arranged so the magnetohydrodynamic forces within the spheromak are nearly balanced, resulting in long-lived (microsecond) confinement times without external fields. Spheromak belongs to a type of plasma configuration referred to as the compact toroids.

The physics of the spheromak and their collisions is similar to a variety of astrophysical events, like coronal loops and filaments, relativistic jets and plasmoids. They are particularly useful for studying magnetic reconnection events, when two or more spheromaks collide. Spheromaks are easy to generate using a "gun" that ejects spheromaks off the end of an electrode into a holding area, called the flux conserver. This has made them useful in the laboratory setting, and spheromak guns are relatively common in astrophysics labs. These devices are often, confusingly, referred to simply as "spheromaks" as well; the term has two meanings.

Spheromaks have been proposed as a magnetic fusion energy concept due to their long confinement times, which was on the same order as the best tokamaks when they were first studied. Although they had some successes during the 1970s and 80s, these small and lower-energy devices had limited performance and most spheromak research ended when fusion funding was dramatically curtailed in the late 1980s. However, in the late 1990s research demonstrated that hotter spheromaks have better confinement times, and this led to a second wave of spheromak machines Spheromaks have also been used to inject plasma into a bigger magnetic confinement experiment like a tokamak.[2]

History

The spheromak has undergone several distinct periods of investigation, with the greatest efforts during the 1980s, and a reemergence in the 2000s.

Background work in astrophysics

A key concept in the understanding of the spheromak is magnetic helicity, a value H that describes the "twistedness" of the magnetic field in a plasma.

The earliest work on these concepts was developed by Hannes Alfvén in 1943,[3] which won him the 1970 Nobel Prize in Physics. His development of the concept of Alfvén waves explained the long-duration dynamics of plasma as electric currents traveling within them produced magnetic fields which, in a fashion similar to a dynamo, gave rise to new currents. In 1950, Lundquist experimentally studied Alfvén waves in mercury and introduced the characterizing Lundquist number, which describes the plasma's conductivity. In 1958, Woltjer, working on astrophysical plasmas, noted that H is conserved, which implies that a twisty field will attempt to maintain its twistyness even with external forces being applied to it.[4]

Starting in 1959, Alfvén and a team including Lindberg, Mitlid and Jacobsen built a device to create balls of plasma for study. This device was identical to modern "coaxial injector" devices (see below) and the experimenters were surprised to find a number of interesting behaviors. Among these was the creation of stable rings of plasma. In spite of their many successes, in 1964 the researchers turned to other areas and the injector concept lay dormant for two decades.[5]

Background work in fusion

In 1951 the first major efforts to produce controlled fusion for power production started in earnest. These early experiments generally used some sort of pulsed power to deliver the large magnetic forces required in the experiments. The magnitude of these currents and the forces that they produced were unprecedented. In 1957 Harold Furth, Levine, and Waniek published a paper on the dynamics of large magnets, which demonstrated that the limiting factor in magnet performance was physical; stresses in the magnet would overcome its own mechanical limits. They proposed winding these magnets in such a way that the forces within the magnet windings cancelled out, the "force-free condition". Although it was not known at the time, this is the same magnetic field as in a spheromak.[6]

In 1957 the ZETA machine started operation in the UK. ZETA was at that time by far the largest and most powerful fusion device in the world. It operated until 1968, by which point many devices matched its size. During its operation, the experimental team noticed that on occasion the plasma would maintain confinement long after the experimental run had ostensibly ended, although this was not studied in depth at the time. Years later in 1974, John Bryan Taylor made great strides in characterizing these self-stable plasmas, which he called "quiescent". He developed the Taylor state equilibrium concept, a state of plasma that conserves helicity in its lowest possible energy state. This led to a re-awakening of compact torus research.[7]

In the aftermath of ZETA the "classical" z-pinch concept fell from favour, and the newer theta-pinch saw a reduced level of activity. While working on such a machine in the early 1960s, one designed with a conical pinch area, Bostick and Wells found that the machine sometimes created stable rings of plasma.[8] A series of machines to study the problem followed, and in one of these magnetic probe measurements found the toroidal magnetic field profile of a spheromak; the toroidal field was zero on axis, rose to a maximum at some interior point, and then went to zero at the wall.[7] However, the theta-pinch failed to reach the high-energy conditions needed for fusion, and interest in the system waned. In spite of these tantalizing hints of interesting behaviour, most work on theta-pinch had ended by the 1970s.

The golden age

The key concept in magnetic fusion energy (MFE) is the Lawson criterion, a combination of the plasma temperature, density and confinement time.[9] Fusion devices generally fell into two classes, pulsed machines like the z-pinch that attempted to reach high densities and temperatures but only for microseconds, while steady state concepts such as the stellarator and magnetic mirror attempted to reach the Lawson criterion through longer confinement times.

Taylor's work suggested that the self-stable plasmas would be a simple way to approach the problem along the confinement time axis. Taylor's work sparked a new round of theoretical developments. In 1979 Rosenbluth and Bussac published a paper describing generalizations of Taylor's work, including a spherical minimum energy state having zero toroidal field on the bounding surface.[10] This means that there is no externally driven current on the device axis and so there are no external toroidal field coils. It appeared that this approach would allow for fusion reactors of greatly simpler design than the predominant stellarator and tokamak approaches.

Several experimental devices emerged almost overnight. Wells, recognizing his earlier experiments as examples of these plasmas, was now at the University of Miami and started gathering funding for a new device combining two of his earlier conical theta-pinch systems, which emerged as Trisops. In Japan, Nihon University built the PS-1, which used a combination of theta and zeta pinches to produce spheromaks. Harold Furth was excited by the prospect of a less-expensive solution to the confinement issue, and started the S1 at the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory, which used inductive heating. Many of these early experiments were summarized by Furth in 1983.[11]

These early MFE experiments culminated in the Compact Torus Experiment (CTX) at Los Alamos. This was this era's largest and most powerful device, generating spheromaks with surface currents of 1 MA, temperatures of 100 eV, and peak electron betas over 20%.[12] CTX also experimented with methods to re-introduce energy into the fully formed spheromak in order to counter losses at the surface. In spite of these early successes, by the late 1980s the tokamak had surpassed the confinement times of the spheromaks by orders of magnitude. For example JET was achieving confinement times on the order of 1 second.[13]

The major event that ended most spheromak work was not technical; funding for the entire US fusion program was dramatically curtailed in FY86, and many of the "alternate approaches", which includes spheromaks, were defunded. Existing experiments in the US continued until their funding ran out, while smaller programs elsewhere, notably in Japan and the new SPHEX machine in the UK, continued from 1979-1997. CTX gained additional funding from the Defence Department and continued experiments until 1990; the last runs improved temperatures to 400 eV,[14] and confinement times on the order of 3 ms.[15]

Astrophysics

The data and theory from these experiments did not go to waste; through the early 1990s their work was widely used by the astrophysics community to explain various events and the spheromak was studied as an add-on to existing MFE devices.

D.M. Rust and A. Kumar were particularly active in using spheromak-related concepts of magnetic helicity and relaxation to study solar prominences.[16] Similar work was carried out at Caltech by Bellan and Hansen at Caltech,[17] and the Swarthmore Spheromak Experiment (SSX) project at Swarthmore College.

Fusion accessory

Some MFE work continued through this period, almost all of it using spheromaks as accessory devices for other reactors. Caltech and INRS-EMT in Canada both used accelerated spheromaks as a way to refuel tokamaks.[18] Others studied the use of spheromaks to inject helicity into tokamaks, eventually leading to the Helicity Injected Spherical Torus (HIST) device and similar concepts for a number of existing devices.[19]

Defence

Hammer, Hartman et al. showed that spheromaks could be accelerated to extremely high velocities using a railgun, and this led to several proposed uses. Among these was the use of such plasmas as "bullets" to fire at incoming warheads with the hope that the associated electrical currents would disrupt its electronics. This led to experiments on the Shiva Star system, although these were cancelled in the mid-1990s.[20][21]

Other domains

Other proposed uses included firing spheromaks at metal targets to generate intense X-ray flashes as a backlighting source for other experiments.[18]In the late 1990s spheromak concepts were applied towards the study of fundamental plasma physics, notably magnetic reconnection.[18] Dual-spheromak machines were built at the University of Tokyo, Princeton (MRX) and Swarthmore College.

Rebirth in MFE

Then, in 1994, fusion history repeated itself. T. Kenneth Fowler was summarizing the results from CTX's experimental runs in the 1980s when he noticed that the confinement time was proportional to the temperature of the plasma.[18] This is unexpected; the ideal gas law generally states that higher temperatures in a given confinement area will lead to higher density and pressure. In conventional devices such as the tokamak this increased temperature/pressure increases turbulence that dramatically lowers confinement time. If the spheromak really did give improved confinement with increased temperature, this would be enormously important. A series of similar papers followed, all of which suggested that there might be a "fast path" to an ignition-level spheromak reactor.[22][23]

The promise was so great that several new MFE experiments started to study these issues. Notable among these is the Sustained Spheromak Physics Experiment (SSPX) at LLNL, which is studying the problems of generating long-life spheromaks through electrostatic injection of additional helicity. It remains unclear whether or not the spheromak can reach a suitable combination of confinement time and temperature to make a practical fusion reactor.[24]

Theory

Force free plasma vortices have uniform magnetic helicity and therefore are stable against many instabilities. Typically, the current decays faster in the colder regions until the gradient in helicity is large enough to allow a turbulent redistribution of the current.

Force free vortices follow the following equations.

×B=αBv=±βB

The first equation describes a Lorentz force-free fluid: the j×B forces are everywhere zero. For a laboratory plasma α is a constant and β is a scalar function of spatial coordinates.

Note that, unlike most plasma structures, the Lorentz force and the Magnus force, ρ×v, play equivalent roles. ρ is the mass density.

The magnetic flux surfaces in a spheromak are toroidal, with the current being totally toroidal at the core of the torus and totally poloidal at the surface of the torus. This is similar to the field configuration of a tokamak, except that the field-producing coils are simpler and do not penetrate the plasma torus.

Spheromaks are subject to external forces, notably the thermal gradient between the hot plasma and its cooler surroundings. Generally this leads to a loss of energy at the outer surface of the spheromak though black body radiation, leading to a thermal gradient in the spheromak itself. Electrical current travels slower in the cooler sections, eventually leading to a redistribution of energy inside, and turbulence eventually destroys the spheromak.

Creating spheromaks

Spheromaks form naturally under a variety of conditions, enabling them to be generated in a number of ways. These devices are also sometimes referred to as spheromaks.[25]

The most common modern device is the "Marshall gun" or "injector".[14] The device consists of two closed cylinders, one inside the other. The inner cylinder is shorter, leaving an empty space at the bottom.[26] An electromagnet inside the inner cylinder is used to set up an initial field. The field is similar to the one from a bar magnet, running vertically down the center of the inner cylinder and up the outside of the apparatus. The magnet is positioned so that the area where the field loops over from the center to outside, where the field lines are roughly horizontal, is aligned with the bottom of the inner cylinder.

A small puff of gas is introduced to the area between the cylinders. A large electric charge supplied by a capacitor bank is applied across the cylinders, ionizing the gas. Currents induced in the resulting plasma interact with the original magnetic field, generating a Lorentz force that pushes the plasma away from the inner cylinder, into the empty area. After a short period the plasma stabilizes into a spheromak.[27]

Other common devices include open-ended or conical theta-pinch, where they were first researched in depth, and machines that generate them magnetically in a steady state.

Since the spheromak's magnetic confinement is self-generated, no external magnet coils are required. However, the spheromak does experience the "tilting perturbation" that allows it to rotate within the confinement area. This can be addressed with external magnets, but more often the confinement area is wrapped in a conductor, typically copper. When the edge of the spheromak torus approaches the concudtive surface, a current is induced into it that, through Lenz's law, reacts to push the spheromak back into the center of the chamber.

It is also possible to get the same effect with a single conductor running down the center of the chamber, through the "hole" in the center of the spheromak.[28] As this conductor's currents are self-generated, it adds little complexity to the design. However, stability can be further improved by running an external current in the central conductor. As the current scales up it approaches the conditions of a traditional tokamak, but in a much smaller size and simpler form. This evolution led to considerable research on the spherical tokamak during the 1990s.

See also

References

Notes

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Bibliography

External links

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Template:Fusion methods Template:Nuclear fusion reactors

  1. Arnie Heller, "Experiment Mimics Nature's Way with Plasmas", Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
  2. M. R. Brown and P. M. Bellan, "Current drive by spheromak injection into a tokamak", Phys. Rev. Lett. 64, 2144–2147 (1990)
  3. Template:Harvnb
  4. Template:Harvnb
  5. Template:Harvnb
  6. Template:Harvnb
  7. 7.0 7.1 Template:Harvnb
  8. Winston Bostick and Daniel Wells, "Azimuthal Magnetic Field in the Conical Theta Pinch", Physics of Fluids, Volume 6 Issue 9, (September 1963), pg. 1325-1331
  9. J. D. Lawson, "Some Criteria for a Power Producing Thermonuclear Reactor", Proceedings of the Physical Society B, Volume 70 Issue 1 (January 1957), p. 6
  10. M. N. Rosenbluth and M. N. Bussac, "MHD Stability of Spheromak", Nuclear Fusion, Volume 19 (1979), pg. 489
  11. Template:Harvnb
  12. Template:Harvnb
  13. P.H. Rebut et al, "A program toward a fusion reactor", Physics of Fluids B, Volume 3 Number 8 (August 1991), pg. 2210
  14. 14.0 14.1 Template:Harvnb
  15. "Physics through the 1990s", National Academies Press, 1986, pg. 198
  16. "Publications for the years"
  17. Freddy Hansen and Paul Bellan, "Experimental Demonstration of How Strapping Fields Can Inhibit Solar Prominence Eruptions", The Astrophysical Journal, 563:L183-L186 (12 December 2001)
  18. 18.0 18.1 18.2 18.3 Template:Harvnb
  19. "Getting to Know the Sun Advances Fusion Research: Coaxial Helicity Injection Could Make Fusion Reactors Cheaper", 9 November 2010
  20. Jane's Defence Weekly, 29 July 1998
  21. Graham et all,"Shiva Star - Marauder Compact Torus System", 16-19 Jun 1991, pg. 990-993
  22. E. B. Hooper, J. H. Hammer, C. W. Barnes, J. C. Fern ́andez and F. J. Wysocki, “A Re-examination of Spheromak Experiments and Opportunities”, Fusion Technology, Volume 29 (1996), pg. 191
  23. E. B. Hooper and T. K. Fowler, “Spheromak Reactor: Physics Opportunities and Issues”, Fusion Technology, Volume 30 (1996), og. 1390
  24. "SSPX - Sustained Spheromak Physics Experiment", Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
  25. What, pg. 1
  26. Path, pg. 5
  27. Path, pg. 6
  28. Paul Czysz and Claudio Bruno, "Future Spacecraft Propulsion Systems", Springer, 2009, pg. 529