That was me being scatterbrained it should read: lower temps and higher densityBy the way, I'd appreciate some clarification of the part about "lower temps and higher temperatures".
Helion Energy to demonstrate net electricity production by 2024
Re: Helion Energy to demonstrate net electricity production by 2024
There are almost zero D-T side reactions. The T is too hot and leaves the plasma quickly for the SOL and then the divertor.
Re: Helion Energy to demonstrate net electricity production by 2024
well, temperature on the graph is a function of magnetic field strength (hence "adiabatic compression" in the paper's title ), but otherwise agreeSkipjack wrote: ↑Mon Jan 05, 2026 9:00 amThey are going for 20 to 30 keV because they need 2/3 of the reactions to be D-D which favors lower temps and higher density. They can scale pretty much linearly between the two. So they can balance it to get the optimal power to breeding ratio.
IIRC, the graphs were made for 20 Tesla magnetic fields.
They CAN do D-T with their design and Polaris will demonstrate that. It is a fallback in case D-He3 fails, but they don't like it at all.
guessing 20T would probably achieve something around 30KeV for D-He3, but again a lot depends on that proton production rate and the fine details of the PIC simulations
believe the post-Orion D-D/D-He3 mix is still up for debate, they may be able to achieve a better ratio with spin polarized He3... also, it might turn out to be cheaper to mine/refine He3 than dedicate a $100MM D-D machine to producing it, there are a couple recent He3 finds at around 9% iirc... otoh refining He3 currently requires deep cryo and is only done in small batches, so who knows where that cost will be in five years
n*kBolt*Te = B**2/(2*mu0) and B^.25 loss scaling? Or not so much? Hopefully we'll know soon...