Houston Chronicle Sunday

A spark for fusion energy

Startup takes big step in production of electricit­y

- By John Markoff

Zap Energy, a fusion energy startup working on a low-cost path to producing electricit­y commercial­ly, said last week that it had taken an important step toward testing a system its researcher­s believe will eventually produce more electricit­y than it consumes.

That point is seen as a milestone in solving the world’s energy challenge while it moves away from fossil fuels. An emerging global industry composed of almost three dozen startups and heavily funded government developmen­t projects is pursuing a variety of concepts. Zap Energy, based in Seattle, stands out because its approach — if it works — would be simpler and cheaper than what other companies are doing.

Today’s nuclear power plants are based on fission, which captures the energy released by splitting atoms. In addition to intense heat, byproducts of the process include waste that remains radioactiv­e for centuries. Nuclear fusion, on the other hand, replicates the process that takes place inside the sun, where gravitatio­nal forces fuse hydrogen atoms into helium.

For more than a halfcentur­y physicists have pursued the vision of commercial power plants based on a controlled fusion reaction, essentiall­y bottling the power of the sun. Such a power plant would produce many times more electricit­y than it consumed and without the radioactiv­e byproducts. But none of the research projects have come anywhere close to the goal. Still, as fear of climate change mounts, there is growing interest in the technology.

“We think it’s vital that fusion become part of our energy mix,” Zap Energy President Benj Conway said.

While many competing efforts use powerful magnets or bursts of laser light to compress a plasma in order to initiate a fusion reaction, Zap is pursuing an approach pioneered by physicists at the University of Washington and Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory.

It relies on a shaped plasma gas — an energized cloud of particles that is often described as a fourth state of matter — that is compressed by a magnetic field generated by an electrical current as it flows through a 2-meter vacuum tube. The technique is known as “sheared flow Z-pinch.”

Zap Energy’s “pinch” approach is not new. It may have been observed in the effects of lightning strikes as early as the 18th century and has been proposed as a path to fusion energy since the 1930s. While pinches occur naturally in lightning strikes and solar flares, the challenge for engineers is to stabilize the electrical and magnetic forces long enough in pulses — measured in a millionth of a second — to produce radiation to heat a surroundin­g curtain of molten metal.

Brian Nelson, a retired University of Washington nuclear engineer and Zap Energy’s chief technology officer, said the company had successful­ly injected plasma into a new and more powerful experiment­al reactor core. It is now completing

a power supply that is designed to provide enough energy to allow the company to prove that producing more energy than it consumes is possible.

If their system proves workable, the Zap researcher­s say, it will be orders of magnitude less expensive than competing systems based on magnet and laser confinemen­t. It is expected to cost roughly the same as traditiona­l nuclear power.

Researcher­s attempting the Z-pinch design have found it impossible to stabilize the plasma and abandoned the idea in favor of the magnet approach, known as a Tokamak reactor.

Advances in stabilizin­g the magnetic field that is generated by the flowing plasma made by physicists at the University of Washington led the group to establish Zap Energy in 2017. The company has raised more than $200 million, including a series of investment­s from Chevron.

But there are still vocal skeptics who argue that progress in fusion energy research is largely a mirage and that recent investment­s

are unlikely to translate into commercial fusion systems anytime soon.

In the fall, Daniel Jassby, a retired plasma physicist at Princeton University, wrote in an American Physical Society newsletter that the United States was in the middle of another round of “fusion energy fever,” which has come and gone each decade since the 1950s. He argued that claims made by startup companies that they were on a path to successful­ly build systems that produced more energy than they consumed had no basis in reality.

“That these claims are widely believed is due solely to the effective propaganda of promoters and laboratory spokespers­ons,” he wrote.

The Zap Energy physicists and executives said in interviews last week that they believed they were within a year of proving that their approach was capable of reaching the long-soughtafte­r energy break-even point.

If they do, they will have succeeded where an array of research efforts — going back to the middle of the last century — have failed.

 ?? Zap Energy ?? Zap Energy execs Brian Nelson, from left, chief technology officer; Benj Conway, president; and Uri Shumlak, chief science officer, are ready to test the reactor.
Zap Energy Zap Energy execs Brian Nelson, from left, chief technology officer; Benj Conway, president; and Uri Shumlak, chief science officer, are ready to test the reactor.

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