(no title)
toveja | 3 years ago
Ideally this energy output would be sustained for days within ITER.
JET is not designed to do this, as it has a copper magnet system, which means if you try to sustain such a plasma (confined with around 5 T magnet and around 2 MA plasma current) for longer than a few seconds, you would melt the magnet.
Edit: ITER would operate at 5-10 T, and around 15-20 MA plasma current.
tsimionescu|3 years ago
toveja|3 years ago
Current fusion devices are not nor were they ever designed to generate electricity for a grid.
This is why we build ITER, and DEMO thereafter. Generating 'usable fusion power' is limited to building reactor scale experiments, which to date, has not been done (ITER will be the first).