SPARC and the High-field Path to Fusion Energy

POSTER

Abstract

The SPARC tokamak is under design as a mid-sized, DT burning experiment. By employing novel high-temperature superconducting magnets, it will achieve 12.2 T, 8.7 MA in a device with R = 1.85 m and a = 0.57 m. The SPARC physics mission is to create and confine a plasma that produces net fusion power and retire risks on the high-field path to commercial fusion energy. The performance to satisfy that mission has been defined as Q $>$ 2 and P$_{Fusion}$ $>$ 50 MW which would be comfortably more than the 25 MW of ICRF input power. Achieving this goal, we believe, would be a sufficient demonstration to place fusion firmly into the world’s energy plans. Significant margin against uncertainties in performance assumptions has been built into the design such that well-established physics predicts that SPARC could produce more than 140 MW of fusion power with Q $>$ 10. Successful operation of SPARC would inform and enable the construction of an ARC-class fusion pilot plant – a device with a major radius on the order of 3 m, producing over 500 MW of fusion power. In this development path, a parallel program to develop required fusion technologies is envisioned as a broadly based collaboration.

*Work Supported by Commonwealth Fusion Systems

Authors

  • Martin Greenwald

    • MIT PSFC, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA
    • MIT PSFC
    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT
    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology Plasma Science and Fusion Center
    • MIT - PSFC
  • J. Irby

    • MIT PSFC
    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT
    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology Plasma Science and Fusion Center
    • MIT - PSFC
  • E. Marmar

    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT
    • MIT - PSFC
  • D. Whyte

    • MIT
    • MIT - PSFC
  • D. Brunner

    • Commonwealth Fusion Systems
  • A. Creely

    • Commonwealth Fusion Systems
  • R. Mumgaard

    • Commonwealth Fusion Systems
  • B. Sorbom

    • Commonwealth Fusion Systems