March 2, 2004
Troy, N.Y. – Physical Review E has announced the
publication of an article by a team of researchers from
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI), Purdue University, Oak
Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL), and the Russian Academy of
Science (RAS) stating that they have replicated and extended
previous experimental results that indicated the occurrence of
nuclear fusion using a novel approach for plasma
confinement.
This approach, called bubble fusion, and the new experimental
results are being published in an extensively peer-reviewed
article titled "Additional Evidence of Nuclear Emissions During
Acoustic Cavitation," which is scheduled to be posted on
Physical Review E's Web site and published in its
journal this month.
The research team used a standing ultrasonic wave to help form
and then implode the cavitation bubbles of deuterated acetone
vapor. The oscillating sound waves caused the bubbles to expand
and then violently collapse, creating strong compression shock
waves around and inside the bubbles. Moving at about the speed
of sound, the internal shock waves impacted at the center of
the bubbles causing very high compression and accompanying
temperatures of about 100 million Kelvin.
These new data were taken with an upgraded instrumentation
system that allowed data acquisition over a much longer time
than was possible in the team's previous bubble fusion
experiments. According to the new data, the observed neutron
emission was several orders of magnitude greater than
background and had extremely high statistical accuracy.
Tritium, which also is produced during the fusion reactions,
was measured and the amount produced was found to be consistent
with the observed neutron production rate.
Earlier test data, which were reported in Science (Vol. 295,
March 2002), indicated that nuclear fusion had occurred, but
these data were questioned because they were taken with less
precise instrumentation.
"These extensive new experiments have replicated and extended
our earlier results and hopefully answer all of the previous
questions surrounding our discovery," said Richard T. Lahey
Jr., the Edward E. Hood Professor of Engineering at Rensselaer
and the director of the analytical part of the joint research
project.
Other fusion techniques, such as those that use strong
magnetic fields or lasers to contain the plasma, cannot easily
achieve the necessary compression, Lahey said. In the approach
to be published in Physical Review E, spherical
compression of the plasma was achieved due to the inertia of
the liquid surrounding the imploding bubbles.
Professor Lahey also explained that, unlike fission reactors,
fusion does not produce a significant amount of radioactive
waste products or decay heat. Tritium gas, a radioactive
by-product of deuterium-deuterium bubble fusion, is actually a
part of the fuel, which can be consumed in deuterium-tritium
fusion reactions.
Researchers Rusi Taleyarkhan, Colin West, and Jae-Seon Cho
conducted the bubble fusion experiments at ORNL. At Rensselaer
and in Russia, Professors Lahey and Robert I. Nigmatulin
performed the theoretical analysis of the bubble dynamics and
predicted the shock-induced pressures, temperatures, and
densities in the imploding vapor bubbles. Robert Block,
professor emeritus of nuclear engineering at Rensselaer, helped
to design, set up, and calibrate a state-of-the-art neutron and
gamma ray detection system for the new experiments.
Special hydrodynamic shock codes have been developed in both
Russia and at Rensselaer to support and interpret the ORNL
experiments. These computer codes indicated that the peak gas
temperatures and densities in the ORNL experiments were
sufficiently high to create fusion reactions. Indeed, the
theoretical shock code predictions of deuterium-deuterium (D-D)
fusion were consistent with the ORNL data.
The research team leaders are all well known authorities in
the fields of multiphase flow and heat transfer technology and
nuclear engineering. Taleyarkhan, a fellow of the American
Nuclear Society (ANS) and the program's director, held the
position of Distinguished Scientist at ORNL, and is currently
the Ardent Bement Jr. Professor of Nuclear Engineering at
Purdue University. Lahey is a fellow of both the ANS and the
American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME), and is a
member of the National Academy of Engineering (NAE). Nigmatulin
is a visiting scholar at Rensselaer, a member of the Russian
Duma, and the president of the Bashkortonstan branch of the
Russian Academy of Sciences (RAS). Block is a fellow of the ANS
and is the longtime director of the Gaerttner Linear
Accelerator (LINAC) Laboratory at Rensselaer. The bubble fusion
research program was supported by a grant from the Defense
Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA).
Contact: Theresa Bourgeois
Phone: (518) 276-2840
E-mail: bourgt@rpi.edu