32
UK firm achieves first commercial tritium breakthrough for fusion fuel
(interestingengineering.com)
A community for high quality news and discussion around technological advancements and changes
Things that fit:
Things that don't fit
Produce more fuel than it consumed... I'm pretty sure that's breaking a law somewhere... And not the human kind...
Any element below iron is technically fuel for fusion.
Yes, but assuming the system has 100% perfect efficiency (which is impossible) it'll only produce the same amount of fuel each time, not more than was put inside.
Problem also is that fusing becomes progressively more difficult the heavier the element gets, requiring more energy to create the fusion. So really, if we're looking at a perfect efficiency, and consider the potential energy from the entire process until fusion isn't possible anymore, you'll only ever get as much energy (fuel) out of it as the fuel (potential energy) you put into it.
I really take issue with such headlines because people who aren't scientifically literate will be mislead and become stupider as a result.
Nonetheless, being able to produce tritium, which is the claim that appears in the headline and the article, is very useful, in part because many reactors use it as a fuel source.
There is only one place where I see "more fuel" show up, which is this single sentence:
I agree that this single sentence could have been better worded.