China Pictorial (English)

人造太阳Artifi­cial Sun

- Edited by Li Zhuoxi

Chinese scientists recently announced that they set a world record by achieving over 100 seconds of steady-state H-mode operation of Experiment­al Advanced Supercondu­cting Tokamak ( EAST). This milestone sets a solid technologi­cal foundation for the developmen­t and utilizatio­n of clean energy in the field of internatio­nal nuclear fusion.

EAST, dubbed an “artificial sun,” is an experiment­al device designed to harness fusion energy.

Nuclear fusion is considered the energy of the future. A 1GW power station requires 500,000 tons of coal, and a nuclear power plant of the same capacity requires 30 tons of nuclear fuel. Yet a thermonucl­ear fusion plant only requires 100 kilograms of water and lithium to generate the same amount of electricit­y.

The “tokamak” concept uses a powerful magnetic field to confine plasma in the shape of a torus. Magnetic fields are used for confinemen­t since no solid material can withstand the extremely high temperatur­e of the plasma needed to produce controlled thermonucl­ear fusion power, or an “artificial sun.”

Based on the tokamak, researcher­s at the Institute of Plasma Physics under the Chinese Academy of Sciences enabled China to independen­tly design and construct EAST in 10 years. The facility is 11 meters tall, with a diameter of eight meters, and weighs 400 tons. The fourth generation of experiment­al Chinese nuclear fusion devices, its purpose is facilitati­ng nuclear fusion reactions under high temperatur­e with the large amount of deuterium and tritium in seawater, to provide continuous clean energy for mankind.

Technologi­cal breakthrou­ghs with the artificial sun will help solve the nuclear power dilemma. Nuclear fusion technology does not produce radioactiv­e materials that pollute the environmen­t. Controlled fusion reactions can be carried out steadily in thin gas, making it clean and safe.

In the latest experiment, EAST created steady-state highconstr­ained plasma- emission for 101.2 seconds at a temperatur­e of 50 million degrees Celsius.

 ?? VCG ?? China’s Experiment­al Advanced Supercondu­cting Tokamak (EAST) in Hefei, Anhui Province. EAST became the world’s first tokamak device to operate for 100 seconds straight.
VCG China’s Experiment­al Advanced Supercondu­cting Tokamak (EAST) in Hefei, Anhui Province. EAST became the world’s first tokamak device to operate for 100 seconds straight.

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