In the world of fusion research, experimental programs aren't
carried out consecutively ... they overlap. Physicists were already trying to
imagine ITER (under the name of INTOR) when construction of the European JET
tokamak was just getting underway in the early 1980s; now, work is underway on
the conception of the next-stage machine, DEMO, while the ITER installation is
still years from finalization.
DEMO is the machine that will bring fusion energy research to the
threshold of a prototype fusion reactor. After ITER—the machine that will
demonstrate the technological and scientific feasibility of
fusion energy—DEMO will open the way to its industrial and commercial
exploitation.
The term DEMO describes more of a phase than a single machine. For the moment,
different conceptual DEMO projects are under consideration by all ITER Members
(China, the European Union, India, Japan, Korea, Russia and, to a lesser
extent, the United States). It's too early to say whether DEMO will be an
international collaboration, like ITER, or a series of national projects.
ITER will be the school where physicists and engineers will learn to build
DEMO. In fact, it's the essence of the international collaboration that has
formed behind the project: in ITER, each participating member will acquire the
experience that will allow it to proceed, back home, with the next step.
Last December during the Monaco ITER International Fusion Energy Days (MIIFED
2013), the ITER Members presented their projects for DEMO. Although the
timeline, the technical specifications and the level of determination varied
from one Member to the next, the objective was the same for all: building the
machine that will demonstrate industrial-scale fusion electricity by 2050.
Japan, Korea, India, Europe and Russia presented a clear calendar in Monaco,
stating their intention to begin building DEMO in the early 2030s in order to
operate it in the 2040s.
China, after having explored physics and technological issues in a test reactor
built in the 2020s (the China Fusion Engineering Test Reactor, CFETR), also
plans to launch the construction of DEMO in the 2030s

DEMO is the
machine that will bring fusion energy research to the threshold of a prototype
fusion reactor. After ITER—the machine that will demonstrate the technological
and scientific feasibility of fusion energy—DEMO will open the way to its
industrial and commercial exploitation.
The government of the United States—for reasons related to the
organization of research funding in that country—has not yet officially engaged
in a DEMO project. The fusion community, for its part, considers that two
intermediary machines are necessary before DEMO: a technological test facility
and another facility with more scientific goals.
What might the future DEMO machine look like? The conceptual designs all sketch
out a machine that is larger than ITER. The large radius ("R") of the
plasma cross-section—which determines the size of the machine—ranges from 6 to
10 metres. In comparison, ITER's "R" measures 6.2 metres and that of
the largest tokamak in operation, JET, measures half that.
How powerful will they be? Again, the designs vary—from 500 MW for the European
DEMO to 1,500 MW for the Japanese DEMO. (A 1,500 MW machine would be the
practical equivalent of a next-generation fission reactor of the type EPR that
is under construction in Flamanville, France or Olkiluoto, Finland.)
And their ambition? For some Members, DEMO will be a pre-industrial
demonstration reactor; for others, it will be a quasi-prototype that requires
no further experimental step before the construction of an industrial-scale
fusion reactor.
In this vast panorama of possibility, one project stands out from the others:
the Russian pre-DEMO project, a hybrid that would combine the principles of
fission and those of fusion within the same machine.

Although the
timeline, the technical specifications and the level of determination vary from
one Member to the next, the objective is the same for all: building the machine
that will demonstrate industrial-scale fusion electricity by 2050.
A bit of physics is necessary to understand. Within ITER, each
fusion reaction will produce one high-energy neutron. The impact of this
neutron on the vessel wall will produce the heat that, in future machines, will
be used for the production of energy.
Some physicists believe that the neutrons produced during fusion could be
exploited in a different manner. They envisage using the energy of the neutrons
for two purposes: to produce nuclear fuel for conventional fission reactors
(through interaction with heavy elements like thorium or depleted uranium) and
also to "break down" nuclear waste.
This is the path explored by Russian research today. As it was described in
Monaco, the machine would be a hybrid reactor baptized DEMO-FNS (for Fusion
Neutron Source). A small tokamak (R=1.9 m) would generate the neutrons
necessary to producing fission fuel and to transmuting radioactive waste.
Although plans are on the table for the next-step device, nothing has yet been
frozen. The return on experience from ITER operation will determine the final
choices made for DEMO. |