I didn't chew on you numbers much, but it sounds consistant with the hearsay that DPF and FRG (?) machines are capable of only small positive Q's, at least with aneutronic fuels. Presumably they would do much better with D-T due to the lower electron temperatures (Bremsstrulung x-ray losses) possibly making them a better aproach than Tokamaks for economical D-T fusion (if that is as far as they can go).MSimon wrote:The thing is DPF work has never stopped. Just Lerner's experiments. The same is not true of the Polywell design.Carl White wrote:It's worth pointing out that Polywell was begging for a long time too. And this despite the fact that they had promising data from their final experiments to present.MSimon wrote:And yet Polywell is getting funds and FF is begging.
In theory FF work to net power should be a table top affair. People have been studying these gizmos in lots of labs around the world for 20 years. You would think that it wouldn't take 20 years for a net power design with so many folks studying the device.
And they are making the device out of Beryllium to avoid heat loading from x-rays. Obviously they are not getting a trivial amount. The electrodes have to be cooled. More lost power. All this from a 5 MW (net power? total power?) device. Peak power per fusion pulse on the order of 5 GW for 3 usec. assuming 100% conversion efficiency - about 15 KJ per pulse. And yet he is driving his devices with a 1 MJ pulse. The numbers don't add up. What that means if true is a bigger fusion pulse with most of the energy going into the drive pulse.
I'm not saying don't spend the money. He may have found something. The density he is working with (4 torr) is good. And he may have found a gas mixture that will work. But Decaborane is going to run up his experimental costs and require a safety engineer. And I'd still be concerned with electrode erosion.
This may be a key advantage for the Polywell which is advertised as having electron temperatures significantly lower than the ion temperatures (kinetic energy) in the core resulting in much less Bremsstrulung losses and correspondingly higher Q's.
Dan Tibbets