Bill Gates And Jeff Bezos Back Startup For Unlimited Clean Energy Via Nuclear Fusion

Authored by indiatimes.com and submitted by upyoars
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A startup backed by two of the richest men on this planet -- Bill Gates and Jeff Bezos is planning on generating unlimited clean and safe energy.

The startup is called Commonwealth Fusion Systems and the process through which this will be achieved will be via nuclear fusion.

Started by 34-year old Brandon Sorbom

Brandon Sorbom, the chief scientific officer for Commonwealth Fusion Systems, is one of the many brains behind this project. He graduated from LA Loyola Marymount University in 2010. After graduating, he decided to move to Boston, the city with the prestigious Massachusetts Institute of Technology with some savings to get a job at MIT’s fusion energy lab

Sorbom’s plan was to get his PhD in nuclear fusion from the aforementioned university but couldn’t get enrolled in any programs since he had studied electrical engineering and engineering physics.

Luckily he got the job and eventually got his PhD. Soon after he joined Commonwealth Fusion Systems -- based on his and his colleague’s research. And since both Bill Gates and Jeff Bezos are committed to clean, renewable energy generation, both tech billionaires are backing Commonwealth Fusion Systems to make it happen.

To the uninitiated, nuclear fusion is a limitless source of safe energy that’s generated by smashing one smaller atom into another heavier atom which generates energy.

What’s amazing is that since the reactors are relatively safer than fission reactors, they can be installed in populated areas or cities, which can help them harness the power.

CFS said in a statement to CNBC, “Fusion can provide both electricity generation and heat — meaning that it can meet all sorts of energy demand, including power homes, recharge batteries, create clean fuels, drive chemical processes, or other industrial uses.”

However, one of the major drawbacks of fusion reactors is that it completely takes over the energy it generates to sustain the reaction with the current technology, basically leaving nothing to power other applications.

To circumvent this, CFS is applying a new method where it is heating and turning a unique form of hydrogen into plasma -- aka the fourth stage of matter. It goes without saying that this comes with its own set of challenges. Primarily plasma is really fragile and any interruptions with the matter would instantly stop the reaction.

To keep this in check, they’ve developed a tokamak -- a container that holds a doughnut of plasma with the help of magnetic fields. Sorbom and his team are working to make this container more robust with the help of more powerful magnets that will allow better insulation of the plasma and allow it to reach higher temperatures, thus releasing more energy and spiking net energy production. As of now, CFS’s machines can reach 100 million degrees celsius.

It goes without saying that fabricating the aforementioned magnets is an expensive affair. The company plans to debut their novel magnet technology in the summer of 2021 and develop SPARC (machine to demonstrate generation of net energy) by 2025.

If all goes well, they’ll work on developing ARC -- their first fusion power plant linked to an energy grid. They plan on making fusion energy mainstream by early 2030s.

ShiftyOgre on February 24th, 2021 at 02:54 UTC »

Not sure I can trust a news article that uses the phrase “it goes without saying”... twice.

hittinskins on February 23rd, 2021 at 23:46 UTC »

This article is too vague for me to trust fully.

dontsaythefgayword on February 23rd, 2021 at 23:10 UTC »

My dad is a nuclear engineer and has been working on the problem of building a working fusion reactor on earth for his entire career.

A decade ago, when I or family friends asked him how close we were, he would say 40 years.... now his answer to that question trends towards a century, or never.

I have asked him to explain the problems with the research to me before, and the simplest explanation he has given me in layman’s terms is that nature’s model for nuclear fusion is in the form of a massive body of plasma, and we simply haven’t found a way to replicate the process in a controlled, scaled-down environment on earth. Our only successful fusion enterprise on earth is the thermonuclear bomb, which is definitely not controlled...

When I shared the news of this new startup with him, he was interested, because they’re using a method that he knows about but has never used in his experimentation. But he was still doubtful people can ever make it work, and said that he has come to believe the best future way to harness the energy of the sun is through solar power, and updating the grid to store the energy produced, along with supplementing it with wind. He hopes he’s wrong though, because of course the potential in fusion energy is spectacular

EDIT: we simply haven’t found a way to replicate the process in a controlled, scaled-down environment on earth, in such a way that we obtain any meaningful energy profit