The most advanced and largest nuclear fusion reactor
The world’s largest and most advanced tokamak fusion reactor, the EU/Japanese 370-tonne JT-60SA reactor, was ignited for the first time at an opening ceremony in Ibaraki Prefecture, Japan.
First designed by Soviet scientists in the 1950s, tokamaks are toroidal reactors, one of the leading approaches to becoming the first commercially viable fusion power plants. For those who don’t know, in these reactors, fusion reactions take place in a ring-shaped chamber and magnetic fields are used to trap extremely hot plasma. This experimental reactor was built to raise the temperature of the plasma to an incredible 200 million degrees Celsius and keep it there stably for just 100 seconds. This significantly exceeds the capacity of previous large tokamaks.
The start of operation of the JT-60SA was celebrated with an official ceremony on 1 December 2023 by EU Energy Commissioner Kadri Simson and Japan’s Minister of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT) Masahito Moriyama. Although the improved reactor is still not close to being a practical energy generator, it will be used to overcome many problems, as well as to test the materials and procedures that will be needed for commercial stations.
Reaching fusion energy is only a matter of time
The main goal is to artificially realize the natural process that occurs in stars like the Sun on Earth and thus unlock unlimited energy. In the simplest way, fusion reactors aim to convert hydrogen into helium by imitating the fusion mechanism of the Sun and to use the enormous energy released in a practical way.