Lessons Learned from the Tokamak Advanced Reactor Innovation and Evaluation Study (ARIES)
- 1 November 1994
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Fusion Technology
- Vol. 26 (3P2) , 1111-1118
- https://doi.org/10.13182/fst94-a40302
Abstract
Lessons from the four-year ARIES (Advanced Reactor Innovation and Evaluation Study) investigation of a number of commercial magnetic-fusion-energy (MFE) power-plant embodiments of the tokamak are summarized. These lessons apply to physics, engineering and technology, and environmental, safety, and health (ES&H) characteristics of projected tokamak power plants. A general conclusion from this extensive investigation of the commercial potential of tokamak power plants is the need for combined, symbiotic advances relative to present understanding in physics, engineering, and materials before economic competitiveness with developing advanced energy sources can be realized. Advanced tokamak plasmas configured in the second-stability regime that achieve both high β and bootstrap fractions near unity through strong profile control offer high promise in this regard.Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Updated Comparison of Economics of Fusion Reactors With Advanced Fission ReactorsFusion Technology, 1991
- Scalings for tokamak energy confinementNuclear Fusion, 1990
- A new look at density limits in tokamaksNuclear Fusion, 1988