Lex Fridman Podcast - #485 – David Kirtley: Nuclear Fusion, Plasma Physics, and the Future of Energy
Episode Date: November 17, 2025David Kirtley is a nuclear fusion engineer and CEO of Helion Energy, a company working on building the world's first commercial fusion power plant by 2028. Thank you for listening ❤ Check out our sp...onsors: https://lexfridman.com/sponsors/ep485-sc See below for timestamps, transcript, and to give feedback, submit questions, contact Lex, etc. Transcript: https://lexfridman.com/david-kirtley-transcript CONTACT LEX: Feedback - give feedback to Lex: https://lexfridman.com/survey AMA - submit questions, videos or call-in: https://lexfridman.com/ama Hiring - join our team: https://lexfridman.com/hiring Other - other ways to get in touch: https://lexfridman.com/contact EPISODE LINKS: David's X: https://x.com/dekirtley David's LinkedIn: https://bit.ly/4qX0KXp Helion: https://www.helionenergy.com/ Helion's YouTube: https://youtube.com/HelionEnergy SPONSORS: To support this podcast, check out our sponsors & get discounts: UPLIFT Desk: Standing desks and office ergonomics. Go to https://upliftdesk.com/lex Fin: AI agent for customer service. Go to https://fin.ai/lex Miro: Online collaborative whiteboard platform. Go to https://miro.com/ LMNT: Zero-sugar electrolyte drink mix. Go to https://drinkLMNT.com/lex BetterHelp: Online therapy and counseling. Go to https://betterhelp.com/lex Shopify: Sell stuff online. Go to https://shopify.com/lex OUTLINE: (00:00) - Introduction (03:00) - Sponsors, Comments, and Reflections (11:35) - Nuclear fission vs fusion (21:35) - Physics of E=mc^2 (26:50) - Is nuclear fusion safe? (32:11) - Chernobyl (38:38) - Geopolitics (40:33) - Extreme scenarios (47:28) - How nuclear fusion works (1:20:20) - Extreme temperatures (1:25:21) - Fusion control and simulation (1:37:15) - Electricity from fusion (2:11:20) - First fusion power plant in 2028 (2:18:13) - Energy needs of GPU clusters (2:28:38) - Kardashev scale (2:36:33) - Fermi Paradox PODCAST LINKS: - Podcast Website: https://lexfridman.com/podcast - Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/2lwqZIr - Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2nEwCF8 - RSS: https://lexfridman.com/feed/podcast/ - Podcast Playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLrAXtmErZgOdP_8GztsuKi9nrraNbKKp4 - Clips Channel: https://www.youtube.com/lexclips
Transcript
Discussion (0)
The following is a conversation with David Kirtley, a nuclear engineer, expert on nuclear fusion,
and the CEO of Helian Energy, a company working on building nuclear fusion reactors
and have made incredible progress in a short period of time that make it seem possible
like we could actually get there as a civilization. This is exciting, because nuclear fusion,
if achieved commercially, would solve most of our energy needs in a clean, safe way,
providing virtually unlimited clean electricity.
The problem is that fusion is incredibly difficult to achieve.
You need to heat hydrogen to over 100 million degrees Celsius
and contain it long enough for atoms to fuse.
That's why the joke in the past has been
that fusion is 30 years away and always will be.
Just in case you're not familiar,
let me clarify the difference between nuclear fusion and nuclear fission.
By the way, I believe, according to the excellent sample-sized subreddit post by PM GoodBeer on this,
the preferred pronunciation of the latter in U.S. is nuclear fission like vision,
and in the UK and other countries is nuclear fission like mission.
I prefer the nuclear fission pronunciation because America.
So today's nuclear power plants use nuclear effigion.
They split apart heavy uranium atoms to release energy.
Fusion does the opposite.
It combines light hydrogen atoms together,
the same reaction that powers the sun and the stars.
The result is that it's clean fuel from water,
no long-lived radioactive waste inherently safe
because a fusion reactor can't melt down.
If something goes wrong, the reactor simply stops.
and there's no carbon emissions.
On a more technical side,
Helene uses a different approach to fusion
than has traditionally been done.
Most fusion efforts have used Takamax,
which are these giant donut-shaped magnetic containment chambers.
Helian uses pulsed magneto-inertial fusion.
David gets into the super-technical physics
and engineering details in this episode,
which was fun and fascinating.
I think it's important to remember.
that for all of human history we've been limited by energy scarcity.
And every major leap in civilization, agriculture, industrialization,
the information age, came in part from unlocking new energy sources.
If someone is able to solve commercial fusion,
we would enter a new era of energy abundance
that fundamentally changes what's possible for us humans.
I'm excited for the future.
and I'm excited for super technical physics podcast episodes.
And now a quick few second mention of each sponsor.
Check them out in the description or at lexfrewman.com slash sponsors.
It is the best way to support this podcast.
We got Uplift Desk for my favorite office desk that I'm behind right now.
Finn for customer service AI agents,
Mero for brainstorming ideas with your team,
element for electrolytes, better help for mental high,
health, and Shopify for selling stuff online.
Choose why is it, my friends.
And now, on to the full ad reads.
I try to make them interesting, but if you skip, please still check out the sponsors.
I enjoy their stuff.
Maybe you will too.
To get in touch with me, for whatever reason, go to Lex Freeman.com slash contact.
All right.
Let's go.
This episode is brought to you by Uplift Desk, my go-to for all office and podcast studio
furniture.
If you go back across many years,
many wonderful conversations, man, just even accessing my memory for some of those conversations,
I feel truly, truly lucky to get to do what I do, to get to be alive, to get to know so many
incredible people, to get a chance to sit down with them.
Behind, by the way, desk I love.
And I remember when I first came to Austin, I got this crappy folding tape, and I think I
recorded a couple conversations. I feel like I know I didn't have anything in that space and I don't
think I yet got the uplift desks in. And I remember feeling like this just doesn't feel right.
And when I pretty quickly got the uplift desks in, everything just locked into place just like it was
before. And then, of course, I got the desk for the computer and for the robotics work I'm doing.
It's just uplift desks everywhere. You should go support them. They're amazing. I love
them very much. Go to upliftdesk.com slash Lex and use code Lex to get four free
accessories, free same day shipping, free returns, a 15-year warranty, and an extra discount off
your entire order. That's UPLI-T-D-E-Sk.com slash Lex.
This episode is also brought to you by Finn, the number one AI agent for customer service.
This is the era of AI agents trying to find their niche and dominate.
This is the way you create a successful company.
It's not just waving hands and saying AI agents are going to change everything.
You figure out problems that people have and create a system that solves those problems.
And Finn does that for customer service.
It has a 65% average resolution rate.
It's trusted by over 5,000 customer service leaders and top AI companies, including Anthropic.
Finn is powered by Fini AI Engine, which is a continuously improving system that
It allows you to analyze, train, test, and deploy over and over repeat that cycle as a system
get smarter and smarter and smarter.
That's kind of the thing that you need to have a system that operates in the real world.
It's built to handle complex, multi-step queries like returns, exchanges, disputes, delivering
high-quality personalized answers just like your best human agent.
Go to fin.a.i. slash Lex to learn more about transforming your customer service and scaling your
support team, that's fin.a.ai slash Lex.
This episode is also brought to you by Mero, an online collaborative platform that enables
teams to brainstorm, prototype, and iterate fast on their ideas.
It converts stick-y-no, screenshots, all those kinds of things, into actual diagrams and
prototypes and minutes.
I spent the last several weeks back in the lab having intense, fascinating, epic, conversation
with graduate students, with researchers about ideas in machine learning and robotics, philosophy,
all of it. Some of the discussions were just behind the table together, maybe with a sheet of paper,
but really those are inefficient because you have a bunch of ideas that are flying around the place
and they're not really archived to be built on in future meetings. So it's really nice to have
tooling that captures those ideas and allows us to then go back to our offices and sort of
think over the things discussed and build on it and building it across days, across weeks.
For that, Miro is excellent.
Help your teams develop great ideas into results with Mero.
Go to mirror.com to find out how.
That's M-I-R-O.com.
This episode is also brought to you by Element.
My daily zero-sugar and delicious electrolyte mix that I'm drinking currently.
that I'm drinking every single day, that I'm drinking a bunch of when I travel.
That's the thing I bring with me to make me feel like a little bit of homeless with me.
I'm thinking of doing some insane travel coming up in the new year across places with just a backpack.
And there I'll have to decide if I want to bring some element because really what you need is water and electrolytes.
but of course you're extremely limited by the number of things you can bring with you
when it's just a backpack but anyway it is good for me physically it is good for me mentally
but it is also just good spiritually in terms of it's a thing that gives me this foundation
of habit and making me feel like i have my shit together especially when i'm doing crazy stuff
physically anyway get a free acon sample pack with any purchase try it a drink element
This episode is also brought to you by Better Help, spelled H-E-L-P-Help.
They figure out what you need and match you with a licensed therapist in under 48 hours.
Over 350 million messages in chat and phone and video sessions.
Over 34,000 licensed therapists.
Over 4.4 million people got help.
That's because the thing is easy.
discreet, affordable, available everywhere.
It's a great first step into trying therapy,
whether it's just therapy for you or therapy for two,
I apologize for rhyming that.
Couples therapy.
I think sometimes with these kinds of things,
the hardest step is the first step to take.
So BetterHelp makes it easy to take the first step.
Check them out.
A betterhelp.com slash Lexon save in your first month.
That's betterhelp.com slash flex.
And last, but now least, our old friend Shopify.
A platform designed for anyone to sell anywhere
with a great-looking online store.
You could probably tell that I'm a little bit happy.
I'm not sure what kind of trajectory this is going to lead
or how this work will materialize,
but it's good to be putting in significant hours
every single day on math,
on programming, on being,
contact with robots, robots all around me, and exploring different cutting-edge ideas.
It's an exciting time for machine learning. It's an exciting time for programming. That excitement,
by the way, is captured masterfully by the great, the powerful DHS, who I believe is on the board
of Shopify, or at the very least, is the ambassador of the technology stack that Shopify
utilizes in order to deliver incredible services at scale, low latency, it works, it's stable,
huge number of transactions, just the insanity of what they have to pull off to know that
underpinning it is beautiful code is wonderful to learn. Anyway, sign up for a $1 per month trial
period at Shopify.com slash lux. That's all lowercase. Go to Shopify.com slash Lex to take your
business to the next level today.
This is Alex Friedman
podcast. To support it, please check out our
sponsors in the description, where you can
also find links to contact me, ask
questions, give feedback,
and so on. And now,
dear friends, here's David
Kurtley.
Let's start with a big picture.
What is nuclear fusion, and maybe what is nuclear fission?
Let's lay out the basics.
So fusion is what powers the universe.
Fusion is what happens in stars, and it's where the vast amount of energy that even
that we use today here on Earth comes from the process of fusion.
It also is what powers plants, and those plants become oil, and those become fossil fuels.
that then powers the rest of human civilization for the last hundred years.
And so fusion really underpins a lot of what has enabled us as humans to go forward.
However, ironically, we don't do it actively here on Earth to make electricity yet.
And so fundamentally, what fusion is is taking the most common elements in the universe,
hydrogen and lightweight isotopes of hydrogen and helium,
and fusing those together to make heavier elements.
In that process, as you combine atomic nuclei
and form heavier nuclei, those nuclei are slightly lighter
than the sum of the parts, and that comes from a lot of the details
of quantum mechanics and how those fundamental particles
combine and interact.
We also talk about the strong nuclear force
that holds the atomic nucleus together
as one of the fundamental forces involved in fusion.
But that mass defect, E equals MC squared, we know for Einstein, is also energy.
And so in that process, a tremendous amount of energy is released.
And the actual reactions, I think, is a lot more interesting than simply it's a little bit lighter and therefore energy is released.
But that's the fundamental process in fusion as you're bringing those lightweight atomic nuclei, those isotopes together.
Fission is the exact opposite, where you're taking the heaviest elements in the universe, uranium, pluton,
things that are so heavy and have so many internal protons and neutrons and electrons that
they're barely held together at all. They're fundamentally unstable or radioactive. And those
elements are very close to falling apart. And as they do that, if you take a uranium 235 or a plutonium
239 nucleus and you add something new, usually it's a neutron, a subatomic particle that's
uncharged, that unstable with that very large nuclei will then break into pieces, many pieces.
is a whole spectrum of pieces.
But if you add up all of those pieces,
they also have slightly less mass
than the initial one did,
the initial uranium or plutonium.
And in that process, again,
equals MC squared.
A tremendous amount of energy is released.
There's a very famous curve
in atomic physics, fusion, or fission,
looking at the periodic table,
going from the lightest elements,
hydrogen, to the heaviest elements,
those uranium, plutonium, and others.
And fusion happens up to iron.
Iron is the magical point in between where lighter elements than iron fuse together and heavier elements fizz or are fizzile and break apart and release energy.
I think about and I look at that process in stars and that our star is fundamentally an early stage star that's burning just hydrogens.
But when it burns and does fusion, those hydrogens combine into heliums and later stage stars can then burn
those heliums, and they can fuse those together to form even heavier elements and
carbons, and those carbons can fuse together and form heavier elements. And that whole stellar
process is something that inspires us at Helion to think about what are fusion fuels, not just
the simplest ones, but more advanced fusion fuels that we see in stars throughout the universe.
Okay, so there's a million things I want to say. So first, maybe zooming out to the biggest
possible picture, if you look across hundreds of millions, billions of years, and all
all the, my opinion, alien civilizations that are out there,
they're going to be powered likely by fusion.
So our advanced intelligence civilization is powered by fusion,
in that the sun is our power plant.
Then the other thing is the physics, again, very basic,
but you said E equals MC squared a couple of times.
Can you explain this equation?
Equals MC squared is a fundamental relationship
that a patent clerk, Einstein, discovered,
and unlocked an entire new realm of physics and engineering
and has shown us atomic physics,
what happens inside the nucleus,
and unlocked our understanding of the universe,
and paved the way for many of the physics advancements
that came after, that we think about mass as these particles.
But in reality, also, at the same time, their energy,
and there's a direct quantitative relationship
between how much energy is in all of that mass.
And in fact, all of the energy that is released,
even by atomic physics, certainly in atomic reactions,
is equals MC squared.
And that I think most people have heard of and are used to.
But also in chemistry and in chemical bonds,
that in those chemical bonds, there is a change in mass.
When you take a hydrogen and an oxygen and you burn them
and you combine them into water, there's a change in mass.
Now, that change per atom and per molecule,
is actually so small that it's extremely hard to measure,
but it's still there.
And that's the energy that is released,
and you can quantify that.
We use units of electron volts as a unit of what is the energy in atomic processes or chemical processes.
Can you also just speak to the different fuels that you mentioned,
both on the fusion and the fission side?
So uranium, plutonium for the fission, and then hydrogen isotopes for the fusion.
So for fission, uranium and plutonium, we don't make those nuclei.
Those right now, for humanity, those have been made in the primordial universe through supernova and Big Bang and the initial formation of the universe where matter was created.
And so we dig those up.
We dig up uranium, plutonium out of the ground.
And in fact, most plutonium we make from uranium.
And we can talk about how to enrich uranium if we want to go down that road.
But that's how we get those molecules and nuclei.
For fusion materials, hydrogenetic species or hydrogens,
are primordial in the universe also only the most common things that are in the universe.
The suns and stars are made up of hydrogens and heliums.
And so the vast majority of atoms in the universe still are hydrogen.
So the basic fuel for vision is already in the ground,
and then the basic fuel for fusion is everywhere.
is everywhere, and we particularly use a type of hydrogen called Deuterium, which is a heavier
isotope of hydrogen. Hydrogen is typically one proton and one electron, atomic mass of one.
Deuterium is an atomic mass of two, which is a proton, which is a charged particle, and it has a
neutron in its nucleus, which is an uncharged particle. And so that's Deuterium. As the fuel now,
Deuterium is also found in all water on Earth, in the water I'm drinking right now. It's in my body.
It's in Coca-Cola.
It's everywhere.
And safe and clean and one of those fundamental particles that was born in the cosmos.
And we estimate that in seawater here on Earth we have,
if we powered at our current use of electricity,
all of humanity on fusion,
somewhere between 100 million years and a billion years of fuel in hydrogen and deuterium here on Earth.
And how is that?
And mostly, that's just in water, mostly that it's a mix of, we call this actually
heavy water, where you have normal water that you're used to. We talk about, and you learn in
school, is H-2O, where there's two hydrogens and oxygen in a nucleus in the molecule. And
Deuterium or heavy water is D2O, two deuteriums and an oxygen. In reality, it's actually
an interesting mix, where you have some H-D-O, so a mix of hydrogen and deuterium. You also
have other hydrogen inic species. Tridium is another one, where you add a second neutron to that
hydrogen, and then you can have T2O tritiated water, and that's something that comes up and we need
to talk about at some point. And there's other, as you go up the periodic table, you get add two
protons and you get helium. And so helium, the most common helium is helium four, which is two
protons and two neutrons. And then we use an isotope of helium. The nucleus is called the helium, which is
what we based the company after, which is two protons and one neutron. It's a light helium molecule.
So the number you mentioned in terms of how much fuel is available, basically the takeaway there is
it's a nearly endless resource in terms of fuel. Is that correct to say? That's correct to say
at today's power level. I think what's interesting is the idea that as we deploy the same power
source that powers the universe here on Earth as humans, can we do more?
Can we have access to much more electricity and much more energy and do really interesting things with that?
And still, there's large amounts, millions and millions of years of power, even at much higher output power levels for humanity.
Yeah, so the moment we start running out of hydrogen and helium, where that means we're doing some pretty incredible things with our technology.
And then that technology is probably going to allow us to propagate out into the universe and then discover other sources.
Because you can also get it on other planets.
Whatever planets of water,
and it looks more and more likely like a lot of them do.
What an incredible future.
Just out into the cosmos, nuclear power planets everywhere.
Yeah.
Okay, so to linger on some of the technical stuff,
you said strong nuclear force.
So how exactly is the energy created?
So how does the E equals MC squared,
the M go to the E?
infusion. So in fusion, you take these lightweight isotopes like hydrogen and deuterium. And as you
combine them and take these molecules and get them closer and closer together, some really
interesting fundamental physics happens. So first, these atomic nuclei are charged. They have an
electric charge. And they like charges repel. And I think everybody is familiar with that,
where you take two positive charges
and you try to push them together
and the electromagnetic force between them
repels them. So you have a force
that's actually pushing against them.
So in fusion, you work to get your fuel
very hot, very, very high temperatures,
100 million degree temperatures.
Temperature really is kinetic energy,
it's motion, it's velocity,
so that these particles are moving so fast
that even though they're coming together
and there's this repulsive electromagnetic force,
they can still come close enough
that another force comes into place.
which is the strong force, and then once you get within a very close distance,
on the order of the scale of those nuclei themselves, of those atomic nuclei.
So the tiniest thing you could imagine, and probably way smaller than that,
these particles then are attracted to each other, and they combine, and they fuse together.
At that point, you create heavier atomic nuclei that have a slightly less mass,
slightly less total mass in the system, and that mass equals MC squared is energy.
So extremely high temperature, extremely high speed.
Maybe that's one of the other differences.
Also with fusion and fission is just the amount of temperature required for the reactions.
Is that accurate to say?
Yeah.
And I think fundamentally, it's that in a lot of ways, fusion is hard and fission is easy.
Nuclear fission happens at room temperature, that this uranium and plutonium is so likely to break apart already.
that's simply the adding of one of these neutrons, one extra particle, will then break it apart
and release energy. And if you have a lot of them together, it will create a chain reaction.
Fusion, that doesn't happen at all. Fusion is actually really hard to do. You have to overcome those
electromagnetic forces to have a single fusion reaction happen. And so it takes things like, in our
sun, we have what is called gravitational confinement, where the gravity, literally the mass of the fuel itself,
is pulling to the center of the sun
and it's pulling in there.
So there's a large force
that's pulling all that fuel together
and holding it and confining it together
such that it gets close enough
and hot enough for long enough
that fusion happens.
And then we'll have to figure out
if we're building fusion reactors,
we have to figure out how to do that confinement
without the huge size gravity of the sun.
That's right.
Obviously, the sun is vastly larger
than Earth, and so we can't do that same process here on Earth.
Yet. No, I'm just kidding. But we have other forces we get to use. We can use the
electromagnetic force, which the sun doesn't get to do, to apply those forces. And I actually
want to take a pause right there and point out a word. Historically, we've used the word
reactor around fusion, but I don't think that's right. And for me, we're really careful
about this terminology. When we look to how that word is defined, and we, we're we're
we can look to how the experts define it. It doesn't really apply to fusion. So the nuclear regulatory
commission, the NRC, defines reactor as, I have it right here. A nuclear reactor is an
apparatus other than an atomic weapon designed or used to sustain nuclear fission and a self-supporting
chain reaction. And there's two big parts to that, that one, fission reaction. Obviously,
fusion is not that. We've talked about why. But also the self-sustaining.
part, and that a reactor is self-sustaining, you take your hands off of it, and it keeps going.
In fusion, that doesn't happen.
And we know, because we have to do it every day, and it's really hard to do.
And so we actually use the word generator, because we don't talk about, for instance, a natural gas
reactor, is that if you stop putting in fuel, it turns off.
And the same thing happens in fusion.
And so we're pretty careful about making sure we talk about that as a generator, where
you're putting in fuel, you're getting electricity out. And then when you stop putting in fuel,
it just shuts off. And you can go even one step further and say, what am I going to do with this
fusion that powers the universe? And what does humanity want out of this? And what we want is
electricity? We don't simply want a set of reactions or even heat and energy. That's great. But what
I really want is electricity. And yeah, we'll talk about the technical details of one of the big benefits
So the linear design of the approach that you do is you get to electricity directly as quickly as possible.
And some of the other alternatives have an intermediate step.
And those, again, are technical details.
But let me sort of still link on the difference between fusion and fission.
What are some advantages at a high level of nuclear fusion as a source of energy?
Fundamentally, as a source of energy, in fusion, you're taking these lightweight isotopes.
You're bringing them together.
You're releasing energy.
and that energy is in the form of charged particles.
It's already in the form of electricity.
Fusion itself has electricity built into it
without a lot of the steam or thermal system requirements.
And so that's a really nice fundamental benefit of fusion itself.
Also, this reaction that's really hard to do turns itself off.
So you end up with that fusion is fundamentally safe.
And that's really a key requirement of any industrial system
is that it turns itself off and it's safe.
You turn the key off on your car.
You know it's going to turn off.
I guess the flip side of that,
just sort of stating the obvious,
but it's nice to lay it out.
For nuclear fission,
it's chain reaction,
so it's hard to shut off.
And it works by boiling water into steam,
which spins turbines and produces electricity.
Can you talk through this process
in a nuclear fission reactor?
In a nuclear fission reactor,
you put enough of this fizzile material uranium or plutonium together, such that as these unstable molecules, these unstable atoms, crack open and break apart, they release heat, that the component parts of those are actually quite hot.
And so not only are the component parts that the uranium breaks into, and it's a whole spectrum of different atoms and atomic nuclei are hot, but it also releases neutrons.
it also releases more of these uncharged particles.
And if you do it right, this fissile material will be next to other fissile material.
And so that neutron will then go and bombard another uranium nucleus, again, opening that up and releasing more heat and more of these neutrons.
And that's how you have those reactions of a self-supporting chain reaction.
And that chain reaction then continues.
People design vision reactors such that you have changed.
just the right balance of enough neutrons are made such as the reaction is continuing,
but not so many neutrons are made that it speeds up because you don't want it to speed up.
And there's some kind of cooling mechanisms also, like that's part of the art and the engineering of it.
And then the key is at the same time, you want to make sure that the whole thing is in water,
is typically the cooling fluid.
There's some more advanced fission reactors that have different cooling fluids,
but water typically, where then that absorbs that both the heat and,
and those extra neutrons.
And so you use the water and the fluid to then run a steam turbine to do traditional electricity
generation and output electricity through your steam turbine.
You end up with complicated systems of flowing liquids and flowing water, balancing the heat.
A lot of fission reactor design comes from that thermal balance of keeping this reaction going,
making sure it doesn't speed up because that's an uncontrolled chain reaction,
you would not want, and balancing the cooling and the output of getting the water out of it.
So we should say that for reasons you already laid out, maybe you can speak to a bit more,
his nuclear fusion is much safer. So there's no chain reaction going on. You can just shut it off.
But it should also be said that as far as I understand, the current fission nuclear reactors are
also very safe. I think there's a perception that nuclear fission reactors are unsafe.
they're dangerous. And if you just look empirically at the statistics, that the fear is not justified
by the actual safety data. Can you just speak to that a little bit? Yeah, we've been talking about
the reaction processes themselves. But I think fundamentally, let's take a step back and look a little
broader and say, let's look at what we care about, which is the power plant, making electricity.
And I look at this from a nuclear engineer's point of view. I spent a lot of years studying these
these systems. And modern vision reactors, I believe, are engineered to be safe. They're engineered
in ways where as those reactions maybe speed up and those systems get hotter, they actually
are built to expand and cool down passively and natively. And there's protection systems in place that
modern systems are quite safe from an engineering perspective. And so I believe that we have figured out
how to build nuclear fission reactors in a way where the engineering of the power plant is safe.
I would say that I look back at the history of what we've built over time, and the challenge
hasn't come to the engineering, actually. I believe the engineers have solved these problems.
The problem comes from humans, and the problem comes from other things around nuclear power.
You have to enrich that uranium to put it in a plant, and the plant's safe, but you had to enrich that
uranium, and that is some of the problem. Or a plant is designed to run for a certain number of
decades safely, but do we run it longer than that? And so those are where I think the real
challenges happen is more with the humans around these systems than the engineering of the
power plants themselves. Well, I have to ask then, what do you think happened in Chernobyl?
What lessons do we learn from Chernobyl nuclear disaster and maybe also Three Mile Island and
Fukushima accidents? I think you're suggesting that it has to do with the humans a bit.
So with Chernobyl and Fukushima, I actually put Three Mile Island in a different category.
In fact, some of the recent news in the last year is that we're going to be restarting Three Mile Island
because there's such a need for clean baseload power.
So that's actually a very interesting other topic we should talk about is why and how we're doing that.
But more than that, going back to the accidents that did happen, in both of those systems,
you can point to the human failure
rather than the engineering failures of those systems
that in Fukushima specifically
there were multiple nuclear fission reactors
on the same site that successfully kept running
through the tsunami, totally successfully,
and were only later shut down for more political reasons.
But the old one, the oldest of them,
that had been on site for long periods
and maybe too long,
I think some experts have looked at this in the past,
was where some of the problems actually happened.
And so I look to that less as a failure of the engineering of the power plants
and more of the humans and around those systems
that we should be operating these plants as designed,
and then I believe they're safe.
And that gets to some of the atomic weapons questions
that I think are the other part around nuclear reactors and fission reactors.
that are concerning for me.
Can you speak to those?
So maybe this is a good place to also lay out the difference between nuclear fission power plants
and nuclear fission weapons and maybe also nuclear fusion power plants and nuclear fusion
weapons.
Like what are the differences here?
Fusion power plants can't be used to make nuclear weapons.
fundamentally that the processes in fusion aren't the same processes that happen in nuclear bombs
and nuclear weapons.
And so it's actually one reason I started in fusion and most of our team thinks about the
mission of fusion of delivering clean, safe electricity, is that also can't be used to make
weapons.
And I think that's a little bit of a distinction from traditional nuclear fission reactors
is that while I totally believe, as a nuclear engineer,
we build power plants now that are safe,
that aren't going to have reactions.
They use a fuel, uranium and plutonium,
that can be used to be made to make nuclear weapons.
That we know that if you take enough fissile material together,
enough uranium, plutonium, put it in a small volume,
that it will not just create a reaction,
but it will create a supercritical reaction
that will then continue and grow
and release a tremendous amount of energy all at once.
And that is a bomb.
That is a bad situation, and that is what we want to avoid.
A lot of the key is recognizing that even though there are things called fusion bombs,
the H-bomb, the hydrogen bomb, the hydrogen bomb has uranium in it.
It's still a fission bomb.
And so how this fundamentally works is that you have a fission reaction, a primary,
and that creates radiation that induces a fusion reaction
with a small amount of fusion fuel that then boosts that uranium reaction again.
And so most of the energy, in fact, 90% of the energy in an H-bomb is all still from the uranium
reactions themselves.
Yeah, I think people call it sort of the nuclear fusion bomb, hydrogen bomb, but really it's
still a nuclear fission bomb.
It's just that fusion is a part of the process to make it more powerful, but you still
need, like you said, the uranium fuel.
So it's not accurate to sort of think of it as a fusion bomb, really.
And if you take away that fissile material, that nuclear fission reaction, the fusion reaction
doesn't happen at all.
In fact, there's been researchers that have over the decades tried to make an oil fusion bomb
and been very unsuccessful at it.
The physics and the engineering don't support it can ever happen with our understanding
today.
The topic we're talking about is more broadly called proliferation.
And this is the creation of nuclear weapons in the world.
and the distribution of those weapons.
And something we know as physicists and engineers
is that fusion can't be used to make nuclear weapons.
We know that.
But that is not sort of widely know.
And part of what we went out to do is work with the proliferation experts in the world,
the people who work to prevent nuclear weapons from being made,
being created, being shared throughout the world,
because we know the challenges, the geopolitical challenges that happen.
and we went to those proliferation experts,
and we were worried they would have the same historical question
of like, well, the word nuclear is in fusion,
so therefore it must be related.
And in fact, the total opposite happened.
What they told us is, please, please, go develop fusion power plants
absolutely as fast as possible.
The world needs this.
And the proliferation experts were telling us
that otherwise people would start
enriching uranium throughout the world. And we'd be building enriched uranium power plants because
we need the electricity that's clean and baseload. But in those processes, they'll be making fuel
that could be one day used for atomic weapons, for nuclear weapons. And they were worried that the
growth of this enriched uranium, think about the centrifuges, that having a lot more centrifuges happening
all over the world would lead to more weapons, at least the possibility of it. And so they are
pushing us as fast as possible. Go build fusion generators and get them deployed everywhere,
not that's just in the United States, but all over the world so that we're building fusion
power and that's meeting humanity and these needs, not this other thing. And so I was really
pleasantly surprised. We've written a number of papers and worked with those communities on this
of what does it mean? How is fusion power safe and can't be used for nuclear weapons?
so this might be interesting to ask on the geopolitics side of things i have the chance to interview a few
world leaders coming up by way of advice what question should i ask world leaders to figure out
the geopolitics of nuclear proliferation nuclear weapons nuclear vision power plants and nuclear fusion power
plants what's the interesting intricate uh complexity there that you could uh maybe speak to
The question I would want to ask is, what would you do if we could deliver for you
low-cost, clean, industrial scale, tens or hundreds of megawatts of fusion power?
That's low-cost, clean, baseload, and doesn't have the geopolitical consequences of uranium
and plutonium, of fissile material.
What would you do there?
How would that change your view of the next?
30 years. But also there's a lot of geopolitics connected to oil, natural gas, and other source of
energy, which I think are important in Saudi Arabia, in the Middle East, in Russia, I mean,
all across the world, and that's interesting, too. So do you think actually if everybody has
nuclear fusion power plants that alleviate some of the geopolitical tension that have to do with
energy, other energy sources? I certainly do. That the fuel is in seawater all over Earth. Everybody
has Deuterium.
And everybody has it.
And so you can't have a monopoly on the fuel.
And no one can control the fuel and no one can turn off the fuel.
No one can cut a pipeline.
Like that just cannot happen with fusion.
And so if we can deploy those plants and we can deploy them quickly,
then it decouples the ability of anyone or any few countries to control energy.
Okay.
So let's sort of return to the basic question.
We already mentioned it a little bit.
Is nuclear fusion safe?
So the power plants that we're talking about, fusion power plants, are they safe?
Yes, fusion power is fundamentally safe.
The physics and the reactions of the fusion system itself means you don't have runaways.
And so we've talked about some of the human factors around power plants and power systems and industrial scale systems.
And that's something that we build into the design of these.
from today, we look at how these systems might fail. And in fact, some of the analysis we do
is we did this analysis for the Nuclear Regulatory Commission over the last few years looking at
how do you regulate fusion power? As we're building the first fusion power plant, we need to
make sure we're regulated safely. And so we spent a lot of time doing the technical case
and the political case in the United States of how to regulate fusion.
And so the analysis we did is assume you have a fusion power plant that's operating.
And then at any one time, a meteor strikes it.
The whole thing is vaporized.
What is the impact of that?
So this is worse than you could ever imagine an actual physical scenario, but let's start there.
And the answer is, you don't need to evacuate the populace nearby the fusion power plant.
And one of the keys, I think, that I come to when I think about this, is the fuel.
In that in a fusion generator, you are continuously feeding in this hydrogen, these deuterium fuels.
And at any one time in a helium fusion system and most fusion systems, you have one second of fuel in that system.
And so what that means is if you stop putting fuel into that system,
Fusion just stops.
But what also means is that if something really catastrophic happened
and for whatever reason, you have all that fuel that's not in the system.
And fusion is so hard to make happen, you hit it with a meteor,
you do anything in that nature, and fusion doesn't happen.
That hydrogen, that heavy water, that teutarium just goes back into the environment
safely and cleanly without issue.
And so that's the fundamental safety mechanism of fusion.
And you can compare that with other types.
types of power plants, oil or a coal power plant, you might have a large pile of coal that
then catches fire and burns.
And it's not catastrophic, but you have a large coal fire for a long time releasing toxic
fumes that you may have to deal with.
And in nuclear power and efficient power plant, you may have several years of fuel sitting
in the core.
And in that case, if something bad happened, you have all that potential energy for things to
happen.
But in fusion, you have literally one second of fuel at any time in the system.
And having a tank of Deuterium, which we have around all the time, can't do fusion by itself.
It needs that complex system.
I love that there's like a power point going on in a secret meeting about like what happens if a meteor
hits a fusion power plant.
Okay, so that's really interesting.
What about the waste?
What kind of waste is there for fusion power plants?
So the fusion reaction itself is still fundamentally an atomic reaction.
And so during this reaction, you do create ionizing radiation.
You create x-rays, you create neutrons, and you create all these charged particles.
The charge particles themselves for a fusion reaction are all contained in the fusion system.
And the x-ray is similar to think about a dentist's office, although a lot more than that,
but that type of same x-ray and x-ray energy is absorbed by the fusion system.
But the thing we do care about is those neutrons.
And so we do have in a fusion system activation, during its operation, neutrons are made and leave.
And so we have to shield these fusion systems during their operation.
And so this is very similar.
In fact, this is a lot of the work we did with the Nuclear Regulatory Commission over the last number of years, that there was a landmark agreement that happened for the NRC that then was codified into law last year called the Advance Act, which is really powerful because it says for the very first time how the U.S. government leading the way on this, which I'm really proud of, will regulate fusion.
and this gets into a little bit of the details.
But the way the Nuclear Regulatory Commission regulates nuclear things in the United States
is in these different sets of statutes.
And nuclear reactors are regulated under something what's called Part 50.
And there's a lot of variety of the regulatory language around that,
but most of it is to handle special nuclear materials, uranium and plutonium.
But fusion is not.
Fusion is regulated under something called Part 30.
And Part 30 is how hospitals are regulated, particle accelerators, other types of irradiators, where as they're operating, you have very high energy particles, ionizing radiation, and you have to protect operators from it, and you have to shield them.
And so we build concrete shields.
And if you came and visited Helion, you would seed plastic, borated polyethylene, and concrete shielding to protect operators and equipment from the fusion reactions while they're happening.
But again, you turn them off, and those fusion reactions stop.
And that's really the key.
There's a funny story related to that.
We've been building fusion systems that do fusion a long time.
And at some level, they got powerful enough doing enough fusion.
We started building these shields and shielding them like a particle accelerator.
And I went to the regulatory bodies that regulate part 30.
this is in Washington State. It's the Department of Health. And so I went to the Department of Health
and said, here's an application for a fusion generator shielding permit as a particle accelerator.
And the very first question I got asked was, great, where do the patients go? Because the standard form had a patient as a hospital, the patient dose for the particle accelerator, and then the shielding.
And we talked all about the shielding and the operators, which is very similar for a healing on system.
And we said, no, no patients at all.
No one's inside this thing.
Our goal is to generate electricity one day.
This was a lot of years ago.
And we were able to go through and work with the state agency to license these fusion particle accelerators.
We were, as far as we know, the first licensed fusion system ever as a particle accelerator for those first systems.
First license we had was in 2020.
We then have gone on and now licensed several of our fusion systems that we've built.
that do fusion, both the shielding, as well as some of the fuel processes.
So high level, what are the different ways to build a nuclear fusion power plant?
So can you explain what a Takamak is, what a solerator is, and what's the linear approach that
Hilan is using?
So there are a number of ways to do fusion.
and fundamentally, in all fusion approaches,
you're trying to do the same fundamental physical process,
which is take these lightweight isotopes, heat them up,
so that they can move at high velocity,
over 100 million degrees,
bring enough of them together, we call it density,
enough of them together in a certain volume,
so that you have reactions happening at a higher rate,
and keep them together long enough
that they are able to collide into each other
and do fusion and really.
release energy. That's the fundamental core. Now, how you do that, how you bring those
particles together, how you hold them together long enough, there's a wide range of technologies
that, as humans, we've been exploring since the 1950s. And I think about several main categories.
If you look at the fusion funding out there, government funding in the world, private funding
actually has quite a different profile, which is an interesting thing to talk about. But in
public funding and federal funding in the United States. There's two mainline programs
called inertial fusion and magnetic fusion. And in inertial fusion, what you're trying to do
is bring together and push together by a variety of means, physical means, those particles.
You push them together. The most common is called laser inertial fusion. Our colleagues at the
National Ignition Facility did this really well and made world records in the last few years
for being able to demonstrate you can do this and do it at scale,
where you take very high power lasers and pulse them together
to combine them to do fusion for a pulse, for a very short period of time,
nanoseconds, billionths of a second.
The other extreme, and you mentioned, Tokomax and Stellarators,
Stellarators are actually my favorite, so we'll talk about those.
Graduate student in Fusion, the Stellarator is the first thing you learn about,
because there's a mathematical solution for a stuff,
that solves perfectly.
And you can write it out and you can solve it.
And analytically, it's very simple.
Building one is very hard.
And so it's taken humanity a number of decades to be able to build stelerators.
And we can do it now with the Wendelstein 7X that came online in the last few years being
the premier stellarator in the world.
I should say all the different ways to do fusion all just look.
so badass in terms of engineering, creating this containment, extremely high temperature, high
density, everything's moving super fast, everything is happening super fast. It's just fascinating.
Humans are able to do, like there's certain things, accelerators of that a little bit,
but this is even cooler because you're generating energy that can power humanity with this
machine. Anyway, can you just speak a little bit more to the inertia and the magnetic fusion
systems. In a magnetic system, your goal is not to push together those particles as fast as possible.
Your goal is to hold on to them for as long as possible. And to do that, we use magnetic fields.
So let's take a step back. What is a magnetic field? So in an electromagnet, there's a variety
ways to make a magnetic field. One of the most famous I think everyone is familiar with is Earth itself.
Earth has what we call the magnetosphere, which is the magnetic protection that's generated actually
by the core of the Earth, but we have a magnetic field around the Earth, and that magnetic field
protects us from particles coming from the galaxy, galactic cosmic rays and solar particles
that would come to Earth. That magnetic field, when you run a compass, you see the magnetic field
from the Earth. So we know it's happening. It's all over. But how we generate it with electric
currents is a little bit different.
And what we do is that we have a loop
of wire. And the simplest
way to think about it is literally a round loop.
And in that loop, you have electrons. You have
electrical current that's running. And when
electrical current, this is some of Maxwell's
equations that we discovered in the 1800s,
that when you have an electrical current
and a wire, it generates a magnetic field
inside that wire. And so when you look
at fusion systems,
you'll always have these big
magnetic coils with large amounts of current.
We don't run a little bit of current.
In our systems, we have hundreds of mega amps of current.
If you think about at your house, you have your breaker box with 200 amps or maybe a 400
amp breaker box, and we run 100 million amps of electrical current.
So massive amounts of electrical current to be able to do this.
So that magnetic field that's generated inside that magnetic coil has some really special
properties. And we take advantage of those properties to do fusion. And some of those properties are
not intuitive. So here's one of my favorites. When you have an electromagnetic field, you have this
coil with electricity going around it, and you have a magnetic field inside of it. And then you have
a test particle, a charged particle, an electron or an ion, which is, if you imagine, to generate this,
I have a coil with electrons moving around it. But if I put one in the middle of it, in this
magnetic field, some really interesting things happen. That electron or that ion that charged
particles is what's called magnetized. And what magnetized means is that it's trapped on that field line.
And in fact, even really more interesting is that it oscillates around that field line. And so the
way I think about this is if you think about the Earth's magnetosphere again, and you think about
the charged particles, the Aurora, the Northern Lights, is a charged particle trapped in the
Earth's magnetic field going around the Earth's magnetic field.
And in the same way, in fusion, we do the same thing here on Earth, but in a smaller
direction where we trap these particles on magnetic fields, and they can go around and
stay a trap to that magnetic field line.
How much of the physics at this scale is understood here, like how these systems behave
when you attract the magnetic field in this way?
is this fundamentally now an engineering problem
or is there a new physics to be discovered
about how the system is behaving?
In Fusion, the physics we're using is actually quite old,
that the fundamental electromagnetic physics is 1800s physics.
The fundamental atomic physics is early 1900s.
And so the fundamental physics of how these work
is very well understood.
Putting them all together into a power plant, that's hard.
And so you can do the math.
Every introductory grad student
does the math on a Stellarator
and say, this is all I need to do.
I just need to make a magnetic coil
in this very complicated shape.
And then fusion will happen.
However, doing that in practice
is actually quite challenging.
So maybe you can speak a little bit more.
So the Stellarator and the Tokomuk,
what's the difference between those two?
They're both magnetic fusion systems.
And then what is Helion do?
The Tokomac and the accelerator are both magnetic systems.
Their goal is to generate this magnetic field and hold on to the fusion fuel long enough.
Like I mentioned, these charged particles are trapped on the magnetic field.
In fact, they're oscillating.
We call that a gyro orbit as the radius that they oscillate around this magnetic field.
And we've been talking about atomic physics where everything is at this nanoscale.
But gyro orbits are not.
Gyro orbits for these fusion particles are measured in inches.
And so they're on a scale that we can see and measure and understand really intuitively.
And in a magnetic system, your goal is to simply trap as many of these particles as you can for long enough and heat them,
so they're hot enough so that they bang into each other.
They collide enough that you're doing fusion.
And you're doing enough fusion to overcome as fast as you're losing those particles.
And so that's what happens when you put particles in a magnetic field and you try to hold on to it.
The challenge is that's really hard to hold on to them long enough.
These particles are moving around.
They're moving at very high velocity, millions of miles per hour.
They're colliding with each other, and they're getting knocked off and getting knocked away.
So we've talked about inertial fusion, where you try to confine a fusion plasma by crushing it as fast as possible.
and magnetic fusion, where you just simply have a magnetic field
and your goal is to hold on to it for as long as possible.
But there's another way to do fusion.
And in some ways, it's one of the earliest approaches for fusion that was successful.
As scientists and engineers, maybe we're not too creative with the terminology,
we call the technique that Helion uses magneto-inertial fusion
because it does a little bit of both.
So to understand that, we can actually go back in history a little bit,
and think about the evolution of some of these approaches to fusion.
And so from our perspective, we look at the technology that we use as built on physics
experiments that were very successful in the 1950s.
And in those systems, the earliest pioneers of fusion said, I know, we understand the physics,
we have to take these gases, heat them to 100 million degrees, and then confine them,
push them together so that fusion happens.
And so what is the best way to do that?
So some of the earliest programs, we call them the Theta Pinch.
And what those programs were were a linear topology, because we knew how to build these magnets.
It's called a solenoid, where you take a series of electric coils, you run electrical current through them that generates a magnetic field.
Great.
So you have a magnetic field.
Now you add your fusion particles.
Okay.
So you've added fusion particles to this solenoid.
Here's the challenge.
Those particles, as they're sitting in that magnetic field, in this nice magnet, escape.
They leave out the ends because there's nothing holding the men.
Great.
So that makes sense.
And so that doesn't work.
Okay.
So then the next approach is say, well, one branch of fusion said, okay, well, to solve that,
why don't we take this solenoid and bend it around?
Let's just make it a big donut.
So as they're escaping, they go around and around in a circle.
Great.
That's a great approach.
And so one branch of fusion went down that direction.
And that became that evolved into the Stellarator and the Tokomac,
different ways of taking those solenoids and wrapping them around
so that the plasmas go around and round and that magnetic field
and those charged particles are held long enough that fusion happens.
But there's a different way to do it.
And so the Theta Pinch was what was born in the 1950s
of take this magnetic field and, oh, they're trying to escape.
Great. Let's not let them escape.
Let's close the bottle.
Let's close the ends.
And so we make the magnetic field much stronger at the ends.
This one was called the mirror.
And so the idea was that the particles would bounce in between.
And that worked, and they got hotter and hotter and hotter.
But guess what?
As you kind of would imagine, as this mirror topology, this linear topology, the pressure
increased inside, the particle pressure, the particles tried to push back on the magnetic field.
They were trying to escape now.
They're getting hotter and hotter.
And just as you imagine, hot gas in a balloon tries to get out the ends.
You could not hold it tight enough at the ends to keep those.
particles in. And in fact, the problem is the hottest ones were the ones that would escape.
And so you do a good job of heating it and they'd all leave out the ends. Okay. So then the next
iteration has said, okay, well, why don't we just not try to hold onto it very long? Why don't
we squeeze it? And so rather than just holding it constantly, let's now crush it. So we built
this solenoid, we pinched the ends, and then we crushed it. And what I mean by crushing
it is not actually like crushing any magnets or changing the topology.
or moving any parts, but just rapidly increasing the magnetic field.
And so going from a magnetic field that's just holding it to now taking all those particles,
if you imagine they were in a streaming around together and then rapidly increasing the magnetic
field so that those particles get closer and closer closer together.
So you increase the density.
And now fusion starts to really happen.
But they ended up hitting a technological limit.
So this is the part that I look back, and I look at the pioneers that in 1958 there was some pioneering work done, and this was in California, what later became Livermore Labs.
There was also some work done at other national labs, too.
These were all federally funded programs to explore this theta-pinch topology.
Can you just squeeze the plasma down fast enough, hard enough?
this was 1958, the transistor was sitting in the laboratory, and they were commuting,
they were turning on millions of amps of electrical current.
And they were doing it, we haven't talked about the timescales, but they were doing it
in millions of a second, microseconds, megahertz speeds, and this was in 1958, no transistor,
no CPUs, and no electrical switches, none of the things that I take for granted every day.
And so they were able to show at that time the highest performing fusion systems.
They got to temperatures.
They didn't get to 100 million degrees, not quite then, but they got to 50 million degrees.
They were outperforming everything else in fusion, but they reached the technical limit
where they just could not build it anymore.
And so they, those pioneers, went in a different direction.
And they started down the laser inertial path of saying like, okay, well, we can't do
these electromagnetic pinches.
But we now have, this new thing has invented the laser, which turns on in a nanoseconds.
It's fast. It's interesting. Let's go down that path.
And it's not, you have to fast forward a couple of decades to researchers found with some of these theta pensions.
When they're operated in a very specific way, something else happened, something new happened.
And that these plasmas where before they squeezed them very hard and just like squeezing a tube of toothpaste, they squirted it out the ends.
now it didn't squirt out the ends.
It actually pushed back.
It stayed confined.
It stayed trapped inside that linear topology.
Even though the ends were open, the plasma didn't leave.
And so there was a large amount of programs of like, what is happening here?
This is an accidental discovery in plasma physics that something new is happening.
And what we discovered is we now call the field reverse configuration.
There's numerous programs of FRC field reverse configuration programs, both at now.
There's actually a number of private companies now of people building field reverse
configurations. And they have some really unique properties. But fundamentally, talking about
the main difference, I described solenoid with magnetic fields throughout the center of that
volume and plasma trapped going back and forth. But some other things can happen, which is
really interesting. And what they discovered early is if they have field going in one direction,
So the plasma, the electrical current is going around the loop
and the plasma is going back and forth along this magnetic field line
inside that solenoid, inside that theta punch.
But then they change the direction of the magnetic field.
And this is what we call field reversal.
And this is really the key is that you start with the plasma going in one direction
and then very rapidly you change the direction.
You change the direction and reverse the direction of that field.
And something really interesting happens,
which is the plasma, this fusion fuel, these charged particles,
which are trapped on the magnetic field lines that are moving back and forth,
you change the direction.
What that means is that you're trying to take that electrical current
and that magnetic field and reverts its direction, flip it.
But it can't flip fast enough, that the plasma is sitting there
and you can't move the particles.
And so what's really interesting is what happens is that because the part of
particles can't move, but you've now flipped the direction of the magnetic field.
You've inverted it. Something really, really unique happens, which is that the plasma itself
reconnects internally. And so now what you're left with is an outside magnetic field,
an electrical coil, and inside the plasma where now it was, before it was moving along,
it's now moving internally.
rapidly reversing the magnetic field plasma self-organizes into a closed field what so it sounds wild it's yeah so first of all there's a lot of there's a million questions i have so one of them what's rapidly what time scale are we're talking about here you have to reverse the electrical current faster than a million degree which is a very hot
gas particle can move. And so that means we have to do it on the order of a millionth of a
second. We have to do it in a millionth of a second. And so in practice, this is hard. And it's
only, we can only do it now because of semiconductor switching. Because we can move things.
We can switch things like the transistor in every CPU in a computer switches at a gigahertz. That
means in a nanosecond. It's switching in a billionth of a second. And so now, which we didn't in the
1950s when these theta pensions were invented.
But now we have the semiconductors to be able to do that.
The self-organizing plasma, can you just speak to that?
What the heck is it doing?
How do we discover?
How do we understand the self-organizing mechanism, the dynamics of the plasma that
it's able to contain itself?
So what I like to do is use an analogy here of once you've made it, it's actually
somewhat straightforward to understand.
Getting to it is tricky.
And how they discovered it the first time is absolutely amazing.
But once you've made it, it's a lot more straightforward to understand.
So, an magnetic coil, when you have an around electrical coil, you have electrical current flowing in that coil.
And if you have a conductor, if you have another, a metal inside that coil, and this is called lenses law in one of the Maxwell equations, is that as you have electrons and you have current flowing in that,
that coil, an equal and opposite electrical current is induced in a piece of metal nearby.
This is the same thing that happens in a transformer, where you have a primary on a transformer
and you have electricity flowing it, and you have a secondary where electricity flows exactly
the opposite direction. We use this every day in our lives. And so in this condition, you have
an electrical conductor where a current can flow, and you have an electrical current flowing
on the outside, electrical current flows on the inside. And in that case, now I've described
two pieces of metal. Now, let's go one step further, and that interconductor is not a piece of metal
anymore. It's one of these high-temperature gases, this plasma, this charged particles. So now
you have electrical current flowing in the plasma. This is really, really interesting. We talked about
these charges moving back and forth. Well, moving electrical charges is current. So in every plasma
condition we've talked about the Tokomac, the Theta Penge, the Stellarator. There's electrical
current flowing in the plasma. But in the field reverse configuration, you have a lot of electrical
current flowing in the plasma, massive amounts of it. And that's the key. So you have the center
core where electrical current is flowing in this transformer, if you want to think about it, primary
and secondary. And here's the craziest part of it. This electrical current, how did I describe a magnet,
an electromagnet is a loop
that has electrical current
flowing in it that generates a magnetic field
and for a theta pinch
and for a mirror and for a tocomac
in that magnetic field
the plasma gets trapped
but in an FRC
this electrical current is the plasma
and that plasma then generates
its own magnetic field
and it's then trapped
on its own magnetic field
that's fascinating
And that's the key.
And so in your Tokomac and your donut and in your funky donut, your Stellarator,
you make the magnets and you trap your plasma in it.
In an FRC, you make the plasma, which makes the magnets.
And it traps itself.
And the craziest part of this in my mind is that we actually see this in nature all the time.
If you look at the sun, we see solar flares.
And in a solar flare, we've all seen the pictures of the photosphere, of the photosphere,
sun and this large arc of plasma coming out, that plasma has current, electrical current flowing in
it. And then we see this solar flare rip off of the sun. And that solar flare then can flow
throughout and continue into the solar system. And for a little while anyway, it makes something
called a plasmoid. That plasmoid is, in fact, electrical current flowing in the plasma,
generating a magnetic field, and holding it for longer than it would otherwise. And so we've observed
these for 100 years. And we've known about these plasmoids for a long time. And there's researchers
that have tried intentionally to make them. But fundamentally, that's what we do every day is make
one of these self-organized, closed field plasmas. In a more controlled way at this rapid rate
of one millionth of a second and being able to make sure it's reliable, stable, and all that kind of
stuff. So by the way, how do you keep the thing stable? And there's the hard part. Because I just
described as solar flare. And yes, we've seen the pictures of them, but we've also watched them
and they appear, they fly away from the sun, and then they go away. And that's not what we want
to infusion, right? We want to be able to control this. And so that's the hard part of the job.
And so that's what we've spent the last number of years learning how to do ourselves and others
on these post-closed field FRC systems. Let's first talk about how to make them, and then we'll
talk about how to make them stable. Because there are two different things.
and we spent a lot of time on both.
So we talked about timescale.
So you have to reverse the field.
You have to change the electrical current
in a millionth of a second.
And so how do you do that?
So I've described this system
as you have a series of magnets.
You have a magnetic field on the outside.
And then on the inside of this,
you have this donut, this FRC,
that has its own electrical current.
And we didn't talk about this yet,
but it's generated a magnetic field.
And that magnetic field has pressure.
And this is the other thing that's really interesting.
So we talked about how this Theta Pinch compresses a magnetic field.
It applies a pressure on the outside.
But the plasma itself has a pressure on the inside.
And it has both a particle pressure, literally the particle's bouncing.
Think about hot gas in a balloon.
The particles expanding, the ideal gas law, expanding and contracting inside a balloon.
But they also have a magnetic pressure.
They have the electromagnetism is pushing back.
And so I like to think about this.
as the motor in a Tesla.
In your electric car, you have a motor, electric motor.
And what that motor has is a series of windings.
Those windings, you flow electrical current.
In this case, from a battery, hit the gas.
Electricity flows from the battery into the motor, into those windings,
and it generates an electromagnetic force, a Lorentz force, is what it's technically
called.
This electromagnetic force induces an electrical current on the armature, on the shaft.
and this is getting into the details,
but into the armature of an electrical motor
that actually is what spins.
And so the outside of a motor doesn't spin.
You have flow electrical current through it,
and the inside does spin.
That electromagnetic force is what is spinning that armature.
In our case, we're inducing an electrical force
in that electromagnet,
and that's putting electrical current,
just like in the armature, into that plasma,
and we can use that force to do interesting things.
So that electromagnetic force
can compress the fusion plasma.
It can expand the fusion plasma,
but here's the problem. It's unstable.
And so this is something you learn very early
in your graduate work as a student in fusion
is you learn about plasmas
that are called high beta plasmas.
So I keep seeing this plasma beta thing everywhere.
What is this ratio of plasma field energy
to confining magnetic field energy?
Please explain.
Plasma beta is the ratio of the magnetic pressure
to the particle.
pressure. And so what that fundamentally means is I talked about how you have a magnetic field.
And in that magnetic field, plasma is trapped on that magnetic field. But it's not very well trapped.
It can escape. It can leave either down the ends. It can freely travel or it can also travel
across the magnetic field. And so we have a term called plasma beta, which gives us an understanding
of how well trapped that plasma is. So as you apply,
a magnetic pressure, a magnetic field to this plasma, it pushes back. And does it push back a little
or does it push back a lot? And for a field reverse configuration in one of our plasmas,
beta is very close to one. In fact, usually by definition, one at any point in the system,
which means that every time I apply a magnetic force on this donut to compress it, the plasma
particles on the inside push back. And what's really interesting is you have an equation for
magnetic pressure, which is B squared over 2 mu not. The magnetic field squared is the external magnetic
pressure. Any magnetic field anywhere generates this pressure. But the plasma particles themselves
also have a pressure. This is the ideal gas law. And we use the definition in KT, density,
bolstman constant, and temperature for pressure. And in high beta, they're the same. B squared over 2 mu
not is NKT. So for a known magnetic field, I know what the density and the temperature of the plasma
is. And just to circle back to it, when we talked about fusion, we talked about it had to be hot enough
and it had to be dense enough. And that's in and that's T. So now I have a very clear equation
between magnetic field and density and temperature of the fusion fuel. And that's really critical.
All plasmus have some, all fusion plasmas have some beta, some number. The FRC,
has one of the highest betas, beta equal one.
However, what you also learn in school when you learn about beta the first time
is you learn that high beta plasmas are typically unstable.
And so the good way to think about this is a tocomac is an accelerator are stable
because those plasmas that are going around in the donut, there's a force on that donut.
But that plasma donut is very well held by all those magnetic fields, by all those magnetic coils.
If it tried to move, it would be confined by that magnetic coil.
But in an FRC is unconfined.
So the plasma is confined, but the whole topology can do something what is called tilt.
Is that this whole plasma donut, because it's under pressure, can just turn over.
The way I think about this is think about the, a motor is a good example.
In an armature, in the center of your motor, you have a spinning armature.
You have this spinning magnet on the inside, and it is held by the main axis of the magnet.
It can't go anywhere.
We don't have that access.
We don't have any mechanical things inside these fusion systems.
There are 100 million degrees.
You can't put any mechanical things inside them.
And so we have nothing to hold on to it.
And so it's unstable.
So when you learn about the FRC, that's the first thing you learn.
And it took us a number of years to learn about a parameter of how to make them stable.
And that's pretty fundamental, but most people who've heard of an FRC haven't understood this really key fact.
And so we have a parameter we call S-star over E.
And we're getting really into the physics weeds here.
Let's go.
But it's really important.
And the good analogy here is a top, literally a top, spinning top.
And so you have a top spinning on your desk.
You know that it'll spin for a little while, and then it will fall over.
It is unstable.
However, if you spin it fast enough, if you take a top and you spin it fast enough,
put enough angular momentum, enough angular inertia into that system, it'll stay upright,
even though it wants to just fall over, even though it's unstable.
And we do the same thing in an FRC, is if you can drive it fast enough,
if you can add enough kinetic energy and inertia to the particles, it will stay stable.
However, you can do another really key thing.
We are not limited now to having a very skinny top.
We can actually make it much bigger.
So the good analogy here is if you have a coin,
and you know you're spinning that coin.
If you spin it faster and faster, it'll stay spinning longer.
However, eventually it'll slow down and fall over.
But if you had a roll of duct tape,
if you had something thicker and heavier and longer,
and it's spinning around that same axis,
it'll stay spinning even longer,
both because of the inertia and because of the geometry.
And so we have this parameter call,
S-star over E. S-star is the hybrid kinetic parameter, which tells you how stable it is from
that top point of view, and the E, which is the elongation of how long it is. And so maybe fortuitously,
thank you nature, gave us a win here, which is that how we make these and these long solenoids
is naturally very, very long. And so we can build these with very long lengths, and if we can
drive them fast enough and hard enough and drive the ions to move at very high velocities,
we can stabilize against those instabilities and hold them stable. And so we now know we can design
with a given S-star over E parameter, we can design these for very long lives. The theory of the
systems we make say that they should last for a few microseconds at most. Us and others in
the field have been able to make them last for thousands of microseconds, thousands of times. Thousands of
times what the stability, the basic, the basic criteria would tell you.
And so we know now how to do this.
And so we just designed them with this built into them.
Can you explain a little bit more that star over E?
Are you given that or is that an emergent thing?
So like at which stage, is that the result or the requirement?
It's a great question.
So it is a requirement of the system, is that you must design it with this
parameter in mind.
The hard part is you have to design it with S-star over E being satisfied the whole time.
And here's the extra trick here.
S-star over E is also a measure of temperature.
And it all comes back to temperature.
The hotter you make them is the same thing, temperature as kinetic energy, is the faster you're
spinning.
So if you take your top and you spin it faster, it's more.
more stable, but you've got to make it hot. And so here's the trick. How do you make something hot
that's starting cold? And it has to be hot by definition. And so that's part of the challenge of
what we do day to day is getting to these hot plasmas. And where people have, other people have
tried to make FRCs and not been very successful, it's because they couldn't get it hot enough, fast
enough, is it fell over, it tilted before it got hot. And so we spend a lot of our electrical
engineering. In some ways, Helion is more of an electrical engineering company than a fusion company
some days, focusing on how to make the electronics fast enough to be able to get it hot enough
soon enough that you can keep it stable the whole time. So you're trying to reach 100 million
degrees. How do you get to that temperature fast? And by the way, what can you say to help
somebody like me understand what 100 million degrees is like? It seems insane.
What does that world look like?
I guess just everything is moving really fast.
Like you said, you can't put anything mechanical in there.
Yeah, so a couple of key things happen.
So when gas is that hot, there's, we talk about the states of matter.
You have solids where ice, it's cold.
The atoms are now bound in a lattice structure together.
They're held together.
And then liquid, you've broken a lot of that lattice structure.
They can move around.
They have some kinetic energy, but they're still pretty contained.
and they stay in the bowl. Keep heating it. Now you're in gas. And now these particles are free to
move around. They're moving around. They're bouncing off of each other all the time. And you can keep
heating it from there. And that's where we talk about some more phases of matter. We can add a little
bit more physics here. We talk about rarefied gases. So when we think about most gases that
humans interact with, they act like a fluid. And what I mean by that is that they're colliding
with each other so often that the particles at any one place here, the air is roughly the same
temperature as the air here, that these particles are bouncing off of each other's, if you put a
really hot one right here, it would then cool enough that all the air is roughly on the same
temperature.
But you can be what is called rarefied, and this is like space.
This is where now you have particles moving around, but they don't collide with each other
very often.
And so you can have one very, very high energy particle and very cold energy particle, and they may
not even touch each other, but maybe occasionally they bang into each other, they collide,
and then they transfer energy. And that's where we call rarefied. And then you can go even hotter
than that. And that's where now the actual atomic states, which has the nucleus, which is a
proton and a neutron, and an electron gets so hot that electron gets energized and then escapes,
leaves the system. And now they're charged. You have a positive nucleus and a negative electron
floating out. And that happens on the order of 10,000 degrees. So where,
hotter than what we're used to. But now we're going to go hotter. We're going to take this plasma and go even hotter. What does that mean? At that point, a lot of the way we think about temperature doesn't really apply. The idea that you have these random motion of particles, because now they're all individual particles moving at very high velocity. So what it's really is a measurement of is velocity. It's really a measurement of how fast is that particle moving. And that's how I really think about temperature.
when you get to that 100 million degrees.
And so it does some more complex things.
If you have this high energy particle,
that's why we like fusion,
is moving at high velocity, and there's another one moving at high velocity,
they will come together, they will collide, and they will fuse.
But other things will happen.
You don't want to touch that high velocity particle with any kind of material
because it will collide with that material, damage that material,
and usually, like, blow off some chunks of that material.
So we don't do that.
We keep those charged particles in a magnetic field.
So they just bounce around and they don't ever touch anything.
And that's really important.
And so it's less thinking about it from the way we normally think about hot and cold
and more thinking about it from a velocity point of view.
So what we should be imagining is extremely fast moving.
What is it?
One million miles per hour.
Is that accurate?
That's the right kind of order for these systems.
Crazy.
And so you're looking for them to collide.
Well, first of all, to get back, is there some interesting,
insights, tricks, anything you could say to the complexity of the problem of getting it
to that high temperature quickly?
So if temperature is velocity, that means they're moving quickly over a given amount of space.
Speed is distance divided by time.
And so if you have a machine of a certain size and it's moving very fast, that tells you
the time that that particle is moving from place to place in that machine.
And, in fact, if it's a million miles per hour, these are on the order of 100 kilometers per second,
which you can flip that around, and you can say you're moving at meters per microsecond.
So feet per millionth of a second.
And so that fundamentally tells you, and we've known this.
As soon as you say, I want to do fusion, you know you need to react to the universe in microseconds
and be able to understand the system in that speed.
And if you get it hotter, it goes even faster, and you have to go faster.
And so we look at those, and that's how we think about the systems.
We measure everything in microseconds, not in seconds.
And so when you do fusion, it's pretty wild.
It's literally a flash.
Fusion happens.
And it's over.
You start it.
You do a lot of fusion.
You recover energy from it.
And then you turn it off before the human eye can really respond, even.
And there's a computer managing all this.
Like, how do you even program?
these kinds of systems to do the switching.
Is there some innovation required there?
So I'm continuously amazed by what the pioneers in Fusion
were able to do before the computer existed
because they had to control things at this scale.
But maybe it was pretty hard
and why we've been able to take what they did and build on it
because now we use modern gigahertz scale computing
to be able to do this.
And so even when I started my career,
we talked about like megahertz processors.
megahertz is microseconds.
That's great.
You're kind of at the border of fast enough,
but you can't do computation at that speed
if all it can do is respond in one microsecond.
But now gigahertz means I can do
a thousand operations in that one microsecond,
so I can do more useful things.
So we use mostly,
this is way too fast for any human to respond to.
So we use what's called programmable logic.
So we program in sequences to the fusion system.
to be able to do this reversal.
We pre-program it, and then we run a sequence,
and then fusion happens.
And so in this sequence, programming language,
we use a variety of them.
Some of the fusion codes are actually written in Fortran still.
Nice.
And though a lot is now more and more running Python.
And so we do a lot of Python.
We do some Java.
And then we also have, because of the speed of this,
it's a lot of assembly language programming.
So we go right to the assembly level
of the programmable logic FPGA.
and we program those.
And so to be able to run one of these systems,
we typically have a series of electrical switches
that turn on this electrical current.
Those are controlled via fiber optic,
because the wires are just too slow.
And so fiber optic, I can respond.
I can send photons at the speed of light.
And so those fiber optics can respond in nanoseconds.
And then I trigger those fiber optics with programmable logic
that we've programmed in the hardware assembly language.
As a small tangent, let me do a...
call to action out there.
I'm still looking for the best Fortran
programmer in the world if people
to talk to them because so many
of the essential systems the world runs on
is still programmed in Fortran.
I think it's a fascinating programming language.
Cobalt too, but Fortran even more
so. It's one of the great sort of
computation and numerical programming
languages.
Anyway, what
in terms of the sensors
that are
giving you some kind of
information about the system in terms of the diagnostics like what kind of at this time scale
what can you collect about the system such that you can respond at the similar time scale
so i'm also calling out for fortran programmers so for different reasons yeah yes great the diagnostic
systems is really one of the key is to how we do this effectively because you need to be able to tell
the system, we're going to trigger electrical current, and we're going to do it in a microsecond.
And we need to know if it's working right. And so in one of these FRC or these pulsed magnetic
systems, you won't have just one electrical switch. I mentioned 100 mega amps, 100 million
amps of electrical current. Even the big transistors we use can only run at 30,000 amps. So you'll
end up with tens of thousands, in fact, the systems we build now, tens of thousands of parallel
electrical switches, all operating
and harmony together. And so
you need to build a system, and this is
what we spend a lot of time with.
And I made the joke that
in a lot of ways, he lands an electrical engineering
company, to
be able to both program,
control, and then
detect how they're operating.
And do it all very fast.
So in a typical sequence,
we will pre-program, the operators will
pre-program a sequence, usually
fed from a numerical
simulation of expecting how the fusion system will perform.
We start with a set of calculations.
We then pre-program all of these electrical switches to a certain sequence to be able to inject
the fuel, reverse it, and then compress it up to fusion conditions.
And then we trigger that and then let it go and measure fusion happening.
But during that process, have to be real-time recording and measuring all of the semiconductors.
and all of the switching in the system.
I don't talk about measuring fusion diagnostics.
That's a whole nother thing, which we can talk about.
This is just on the electrical control side.
And so some of the pioneering things we'd be able to do
is that real time you're monitoring all of these switches.
You're watching who is triggering correctly,
who is not triggering correctly.
And if systems aren't working, you're shutting down this
because you want to make sure that all the sequences are operating correctly.
So some of the key diagnostics,
it's actually pretty amazing.
that even early in my career, we didn't have a lot of fiber optics built into the system.
And now it's absolutely essential.
And so every one of these electrical switches has fiber optic signals going into it,
and fiber optic signals coming out, understanding how it's actually operating.
And real time, all of these systems are being monitored by more fiber optics.
We call these Rogowski coils, but they're electromagnetic coils that are powered by the electrical current themselves.
So as these switches are conducting, they broadcast a signal that says, yes, I'm electrically conducting an optical signal, fiber optics, that come back to a central repository where we detect those signals.
And so real time, we're monitoring all of this so that we know that these systems are behaving and operating at their optimal performance.
What's the role of numerical simulation on all of this sort of, I guess, ahead of time, how much numerical simulation are you doing?
to understand how the system is going to behave,
how the different parameters all come together,
the electrical system,
and how that all maps to the fusion that's actually generated.
Yeah, the operation of a fusion system is pretty fascinating.
Because all of this happens on a time scale,
or human operators cannot really be involved.
And so you have to have pre-programmed the majority,
we call them shots. You're going to do a shot. And when you're operating them repetitively
and you're running long periods of times, you still have all computers doing both the triggering
and the measuring of how they're performing real time the whole time. And so how this
typically works, at least in our systems, is that we will design a system with a combination of,
with some numerical simulation tools that we've developed based off of decades and decades of
amazing government programs. National lab programs developed these numerical codes. We use a kind of a
code called an MHD, magneto-hydrodynamic code. And that's for people, for the engineers out there
who are used to CFD, computational fluid dynamics. This is very similar. You take the same
sets of equations, actually, and add the electromagnetic equations on top of those. And so you get
magneto-hydrodynamic. Are you simulating at the level of a particle? Is there some quantum mechanical
aspects to this also? How low does it go?
We have multiple codes at different levels because one of the main computational challenges
is amazingly, even given all that we have built, for fusion systems, computers are still
not fast enough to simulate everything. And so we have a number of codes that we use.
one we call fluid codes where you treat the ions, the electrons, all these fusion particles,
you treat them as fluids, as gases, ideal gas law, with electromagnetic forces.
In those, we can simulate not just the fusion fuel, which is important, but all of the electrical
circuitry.
We talked about capacitors and magnetic coils and the electrical current and the switches.
Well, we actually simulate the full thing, starting literally with the spice model,
more of that electrical engineering.
We start with the spice model
and use that to drive the plasma physics model.
And that's one level of simulation.
We use that to do design work
and then also to try to understand
how we think the machine will run.
But then we go one level deeper
and we start thinking about particles.
And we think about the ions
and we treat the ions as particles.
And we look at the ion behavior.
And for that one,
the computational resources are several orders of magnitude
larger.
Luckily, a lot of the work in GPUs
the AI data center work,
is directly applicable to those simulations.
It's been able to speed up our work,
which is pretty fascinating.
That's a whole other tangent we can go down.
Those hybrid codes, we call them,
particle and cell codes,
now treat the ions as particles.
And that lets us measure and simulate the behavior.
I mentioned the stability criteria,
S-star ovary, the top behavior.
That behavior, we now need these more advanced codes
to be able to simulate.
And those are more more,
modern. Those we've only been able to apply in practice for the last few years, actually,
which is pretty fascinating, that the old stability rules were built off of testing,
empirical tests, where now we can simulate that and we know why they work and how they work
and we can do some predictions on them. And so that's really fascinating that we've been
able to push those boundaries. And what are the different variables you're playing with? Are you
still playing with topology? Like, what are the different variables in play here? Yeah, each of the
different simulations, we analyze and use it to design different parts of the machine.
So at the MHD level, where we have the spike, where we actually have the circuit model,
now our design team uses this to design the circuitry, where we're designing which
capacitor to use, which switch to use, how many cables to use, literally to that level, how big of
a cable to use.
So as we're doing power plant designs right now, those are the tools we're using today, every
day the team is using. Then you can go one level deeper and say, okay, let's use these more advanced
computational tools about stability to say, okay, great, but I now know the circuitry, but let's
look at the magnetic field topology. How do I design the magnet, the shape of the magnet, exactly,
the timing of the magnet exactly. I have to trigger one magnet and the next magnet next to it,
and the next magnet next to it. How do I have that shape and that design? And so that's where
you're using those more advanced tools.
Now, those, unfortunately, those are still too slow.
And so those simulations may take a day or two to run.
And so a data, an operator right now does a lot of simulations ahead of time,
then collects data through their operations of the machines,
making these field reverse configurations going through parameter sweeps.
And then the simulation team then goes back and looks at that data and compares it with
simulations.
I'm really excited about some of the things we're seeing.
seeing an artificial intelligence and reinforce learning to be able to speed up that process.
And so we're watching and starting to work on that now of can we now, rather than using
it where we use it today, where we do a simulation to design a machine or a test, run the test,
and then over the next couple of days, compare the testing with the simulation and use that to
inform what we're going to run for the next set of tests.
But in fact, do it more real time, where you're now an operator can pull up what the
AI or what the machine learning would have predicted, it should have done, and then use that to
understand what's happening in the actual programs and the actual generators themselves.
All right.
So there's a million questions there.
So first of all, how much understanding do we have about how many collisions happen?
Can we go to the fusion?
How many collisions are there?
And how does that map to the electricity?
And maybe can you just even speak to the directly mapping to the electricity?
which is one of the differences between this approach and the Takamak approach.
So how much fusion do you get out in these systems?
And that's really the right key question.
So we already talked about beta, that b squared the magnetic pressure is equal to NKT
and being the density, T being temperature.
And then we talked about fusion where your goal for fusion is to get particles hot, high
temperature, get enough of them together, density, and then you want to get them together long
enough, we call that tau, so n, t, and tau, long enough that fusion happens, and a lot of
fusion happens, more than any of the loss rates that are happening in t-tow. And in beta,
with b squared, you know already two of those parameters, N-N-T, are equal, and so that tells you right
away the goal is to maximize magnetic field, absolutely maximize magnetic field. And most folks in magnetic
fusion, whether it's a Tokomac or it's a Theta Pinch or it's an FRC, are attempting to do that,
maximize the magnetic field.
So we're all pushing to that.
What's really nice in Pulse systems is that we know how to do that.
In fact, in a Pulse system, researchers in Pulsed magnetic fields have demonstrated over
100 Tesla magnetic fields in pulsed magnets.
That's much higher than you can get in a steady magnet or what's been demonstrated so far.
Just a clarification question.
So maximizing magnetic fuel is about the N and the T, the beta.
So we're not talking about Tau yet.
Not yet, but we need to because that's really important.
And so we can even talk even a little bit further about how fusion scales.
And so in fusion, the hotter you get the fuel, the more fusion you get.
And we know that by increasing the magnetic field, B squared is in T, you increase density and temperature together.
more density, more temperatures, more fusion, plus more temperatures, even more fusion.
And so what we see is that in these types of systems, a scaling very clearly of magnetic
field to the 3.75 power, or even in a lot of demonstrations, 3.77, that specific scaling.
That's a very strong scaling of fusion power output and fusion reactions.
And so that tells you you want to go to as maximum magnetic field as you can.
Pulse systems are really powerful.
Pulse systems have showed when you do pulsed magnetic fields compared to a steady magnetic field,
researchers have shown over 100 Tesla magnetic fields,
where in a steady system, people have showed in the 20, maybe high 20 Tesla systems.
And if it's B to the 3.77 power, already you can see massive fusion power outputs by doing a pulsed system.
Okay, got it.
So we maximize it in the magnetic field.
So that's going, a number go up.
super up. How do you get
the duration, the tau?
But then I said pulsed. And pulse already
implies shorter tau. And so
that is in the fusion
field, the name of the game.
Folks will have a very
inertial fusion will have a
nanosecond tau, very short,
but then very high pressure.
They don't have magnetic fields, but very high
pressure. And then in
Stellarators and Tokomax,
your goal is very long
tau, but you'll have
much lower density, and you can't really go too much in temperature, but they'll have much
lower density. And so where we live in the post-magnetic or the magneto-inertial fusion is in the
middle, is in extremely high magnetic fields, increasing pressure as much as you can, and then
keeping them around long enough. And so that gets to the tau. That gets to that energy confinement
lifetime, and also it gets to stability. And so this is the thing that this field reverse
configuration, which has showed that we can build, that these plasmas can last for hundreds
or thousands of times the basic theory has shown that now you can have long enough lifetimes.
So what that means is in a practical fusion system, that there are lifetimes of these high beta
pulse systems between 100 microseconds and a few milliseconds, thousands of a second.
And you hold onto it for a few thousandths of a second, you do fusion, and then you exhaust.
it. And so the whole process in this is we start with a magnetic field that fills the full
chamber. You then inject fusion fuel. You ionize it, superheating it now to an ice cold
1 million degrees, but hot enough that you have charged particles. You have plasmas.
You can then start increasing the magnetic field. You form a field reverse configuration.
and then rapidly increase the magnetic field further,
increasing from 1 to 5 to 10, 20, to even higher magnetic fields.
And as you do that, the plasma heats, you compress it,
increasing the field and pressure.
Fusion is now happening.
New charged particles are being born inside this system
with a tremendous amount of heat and energy,
but in charged particles.
And this is where the beta,
really, really works in your advantage is that just like magnetic pressure on the outside,
magnetic pressure is in KT compresses the fuel and increasing pressure and temperature.
When the pressure and temperature of the plasma increase, in KT increases, it pushes back on the
magnetic field, increasing the magnetic field on the outside of the plasma.
And what that does is magnetic field
is electromagnetic current
and current running in a wire.
And what that does is pushes current back in the wire.
And so the plasma itself now pushes back on the magnetic field,
pushing electrical current out of the system
and recharging the capacitors
where we started this whole process.
All in a self-organizing way.
So I think it's good to sort of clarify
how fusion usually generates energy,
where this intermediate step of here,
heating up water, then the steam is the thing that leads to electricity.
And then, of course, the FRC method that you use leads directly to electricity.
I was wondering if you could describe sort of the difference between those two.
Yeah, I like the analogy of the match and the campfire.
And I hear that a lot in fusion, where a lot of what steady fusion, think a Stellarator or Tokomac,
is attempting to do, is take a little bit of fuel, that match.
and then add heat to ignite that match.
And then put it with enough fuel and in the right conditions
and hold on to it for a long time that it grows into a campfire,
even if they do a good job, a bonfire.
It's creating a tremendous amount of energy in that steady system,
burning fuel in the same place, generating some ash,
generating a lot of heat in that reaction.
And in a traditional, in a tocomac or a stellarator,
that's a lot of what you're doing is you're holding on to the heat as much as possible to keep
that reaction going. And in that, the optimal fuel is called Deuterium and Tritium, where you have
Deuterium is a heavy isotope of hydrogen where you have an extra neutron. And tritium is a very
rare form of hydrogen that's an unstable form. It's so rare. It's hard to get where it has two
neutrons and a proton. And when you fuse those together at very high temperatures,
at very high densities or high enough densities and very high temperatures,
they make helium, which is a charged particle,
which stays inside the campfire, inside the Tokomac,
continuing to heat it and stoke the flames,
and it makes a neutron which leaves the system
because it's uncharged. It has no charge.
And in that system, it's actually ideal.
It's really great because in a campfire, you have this reaction going,
and you want to get the energy out of it.
You want to use it.
And you don't want to just burn it.
up all the fuel and do nothing. That's not really valuable. What's really valuable is to stand next
to the campfire and get the heat, get what comes off of it. And then use that in a traditional
fusion system to boil water, to heat the water, and then at 30, 35% efficiency, then convert that
through a steam turbine into a cooling tower and cool off the fuel and extract electricity. And we know
steam turbines, coal plants do this, nuclear vision reactors do this. And so we know how to
do that. And that's the traditional way of doing it. But what I think there's other ways to do it with
a pulsed magnetic system, there's one more thing you get to do. Because you have this high beta
where there's an electric field, an electromagnetic force that's now compressing the fusion fuel.
It's increasing in temperature. It's getting hotter. It's increasing in density fusion is
happening. New fusion particles are being born. And
those particles are not just stoking the flame. They're not just holding on the campfire,
like in the Tokomac, but they're doing another thing, which is really powerful, which is they're
pushing back on the magnetic field. They're applying a pressure. That pressure induces a current.
We can extract that electrical current. But it takes you into another direction. So your analogy of
the campfire now breaks down, because now the campfire is expanding. It's pushing back on something.
And so now it's the analogy of the piston engine, as you move from the match the campfire to now
pistons. And so you use in a piston engine, you use the motion of the piston, the pressure on it,
and the motion of it, to do something useful. And in a piston engine, it's to turn a crank shaft
and run a turn a crank shaft and run wheels, or maybe even a piston engine to turn a crank shaft
and run a generator and make electricity. And in fact, you can do it pretty high efficiency
in a generator using that method,
using the expansion of that piston.
And what we do is use the expansion of the magnetic field
to extract that electricity.
And we believe you can do it much, much higher efficiencies.
In fact, there's been theoretical papers
that show not 30 to 35% efficiency
like a steam turbine can do,
but 80% efficiency, 85% efficiency,
extract much more of the energy of the fuel in that process.
Can you actually just take a tiny tangent on the word efficiency here?
So, yeah, so you said 30%.
So it's inefficient, and that efficiency measure is how much of the energy is actually converted to electricity?
That measure is how much of the thermal energy that gets outside of the system is then converted into electricity, which is the thing we care about.
We're not in this to make fusion.
We're in this to make electricity, and we're using fusion to make electricity.
And so from my point of view, that should be the focus, is how do we get to that?
So that's the efficiency of that thermal energy that makes it out to electricity.
Would it is not a measure of how much energy you put into the system and what happens to that?
In terms of you started this campfire with a blow torch, what about all that blowtorch energy?
What are you getting for that?
And so I think that's something that high beta is one more side benefit that it turns out is actually maybe the tail that
wag as a dog is that not only do you at high efficiency get out any of the new fusion energy,
which is great, because that's what you want, make electricity from fusion, but you also get
to recover all of that magnetic energy you put back into it. And that's the really powerful one.
And that's something that folks have demonstrated over 95% efficiency, that you can put
electricity into fusion and then get that electricity back out and 95% efficiency plus some very
high efficiency, maybe 80%, maybe higher, of all the fusion
product electricity, too. So now you're just making a tremendous amount of electricity in one of
these systems. And that has all kinds of performance and engineering benefits that are really
powerful. But it also pushes you to other fuels. So we talked about how Deuterium and Tritium
fuels make this neutron, which leaves the system to boil water, to run steam turbines, but it doesn't
push back on the magnetic field. So in one of these high beta systems, it's actually not a great fuel
at all. And so
the other fuels that are out
there are even more interesting. And one
of the candidate fuels that's really interesting
is called Deuterium and Helium 3.
Now we talked about Deuterium, heavy
hydrogen. Well, helium three,
the nucleus is also called
a helium. That's why we named the company that.
Is light helium,
which is in normal helium,
which is what you find in a balloon, two
protons, two neutrons. It's very
stable and
found
found commonly. Helium 3 is also stable, but it's not found commonly. Fortunately, it's
lightweight, so it leaves. It literally leaves the atmosphere and goes into space. So we don't
have a lot of it here on Earth, and so you have to make it, or you have to go into space. And there's a
whole other thing about where do you get it. You get it from the moon. Jupiter has, it turns out,
massive amounts of helium 3. And so, but when you take Deuterium and helium 3, and you fuse those
together. You also get that helium particle, that alpha particle that we call that infusion,
but instead of the neutron, you get a proton. And that proton is a charged particle. It's a
helium, a hydrogen nucleus. That proton is now trapped in the magnetic field, pushes back,
and you can extract that electricity. Now, there's some prices to be paid for this helium-3 fuel,
but for a high beta system like a pulsed magnetic fusion system, that's really the ideal fuel.
When you say prices, what is the, is there like technical costs or what are the prices?
What shape do the prices take?
All kinds of shapes.
A physics and engineering, a technical, and a business cost.
And so let's dive in.
Great, great.
Yeah, so we talked about how helium three is.
So from the fusion physics point of view, we talked about 100 million degrees.
That's the temperature that deuterium and tritium fusion works really well.
And that's the temperature that traditional fusion folks have really focused on getting to.
That's the threshold of when you get to 100 million degrees, you're at the operating point
of fusion and you know it works, colloquially anyway.
Helium 3 requires higher temperatures.
That's not enough.
Yes, fusion happens for helium deuterium and helium 3 at 100 million degrees, but it's not
its optimal temperature.
And in fact, in a high beta system, the optimal temperature is higher 200, even sometimes
300 million degrees. So you have to get to even higher temperatures, temperature's hard, and so you have
to push to even higher temperatures than you had before. And so that's one of the downsides. The other
downside can be, as you get to those higher temperatures, we talked about B squared is in T. B squared is
density times temperature. Well, for a given magnetic field, density and temperature are now inverse.
So as I increase temperature, density decreases.
And so now you have an issue of you may have less particles to do fusion,
which means your fusion system has to get bigger than it was before.
So for the same reaction rates, a helium-3 system compared to Deuterium Tritium
has to operate at higher temperature and be bigger.
However, the flip side is, is if you can now recover energy at three times the energy
efficiency at 80 some percent versus 30 some percent and recover all your input energy,
then now it's actually about the same size because for the same electricity output,
not energy, it's not energy that we're worried about. It's electricity we're worried about.
Electricity output, now you can actually build systems of similar size and similar energy,
only they're now at this much higher efficiency.
Got it. Can you say more about size? What are we talking about here?
Like, why size an important constraint?
And that gets to one of the other price.
That gets to money.
So our goal is we want to build clean, low-cost electricity and get it out in the world.
But that means it needs to be low-cost.
That's fundamental.
If it's really expensive, no one's going to buy it.
And while it can be clean, it's not going to be deployed.
And so that always has to be a part of why the promise of fusion is that can be low-cost.
So how do we know how much fusion systems cost?
It's a really great question.
And a lot of it comes down to fundamental size that you have to just build things.
And so there's some really first principles cost engineering you can do around power plants for fundamentally, what do they cost?
How much concrete went into it?
Fundamentally, how big is it?
And that if you're doing a good job of manufacturing, your goal is to, your goal is to,
manufacture a product for as low
of cost as you can, so you can sell it
for as low price as you can,
it asymptotes to the
material cost, because you
never get cheaper than that. So it's a little
in some sense, some sort
of first principle sense is
how much concrete.
It goes into building the
power plant. How much concrete? How much
concrete, how much steel, how
much copper and aluminum,
different materials cost different amount,
but at the end of the day, the
cheapest function is the least amount of materials.
Wow. Okay.
And so that's, we think a lot about that and how we can make these systems smaller
so they can be developed at lower cost.
Now, there's a flip side.
You still need to produce electricity.
So if you make them really small and they don't produce electricity,
and there is some minimum size to fusion, and that's really important.
Fusion scientists and engineers don't see you'd ever have a fusion generator on the back
of your DeLorean, for instance.
The physics doesn't let that one happen.
At least physics is, as we've understood for the last 100 or 200 years.
Well, there's a lot of really interesting business questions here because you're basically at the cutting edge of science, of technology, of physics, of engineering, trying to basically innovate into the future rapidly.
How do you do that?
Because the R&D here, the research alone is a lot of money.
so what's i mean what can you say about that like how to be bold and fearless and pushing this
technology into the future when so much is unknown and it costs so much to just do the research
so i think about this in a couple of ways one the need um we look to the world and we know
the world needs clean low cost
safe electricity and just to meet our needs today. And not to even talk about the needs of tomorrow
or the needs of AI or the growth that's probably coming, just to meet today. And so, but fundamental to
that is it has to be a product that people will buy. It has to be a generator that is making
that electricity at low cost. And it's got to be soon. And so a lot of what I think
about is how do we do those two things together. And a lot of that is scale. And a lot of that is
thinking about, and not big scale. In fact, it's the opposite of that. It's small scale. It's how do you
build a product that's mass-producible, that you can build quickly and learn quickly? And what I've
found in my career at this is that they're actually the same thing. And that the faster you can
build a thing, the faster you can learn if that thing works, the faster you can now you can
actually iterate on that and build the next thing. And so what I have spent my career building
is teams of humans and a company that are builders that can build high technology things
quickly. That if you want to do R&D, you don't want large-scale, multinational, complex, huge
systems. You want to actually take the smallest thing you can build that it accomplishes the
mission. And infusion, there is a minimum size, but accomplishes the mission, and then build it
quickly and build whole teams around building it quickly. And incentivize folks to move quickly,
iterate and learn. And kind of the irony, I think, of one of the things that I've discovered
is that by focusing on manufacturing, by focusing on low-cost, very rapid manufacturing,
you actually get to do science faster.
And at the beginning of my career, I would never have guessed that.
I would have thought the way to do science is to make a giant demonstration particle
accelerator somewhere to make a large complex science experiment is the best way to do science.
And what I've found is actually small iterative, just building as fast as possible
gets you there faster because you can learn, you can build, you can iterate, you can solve
the problems, and then you can learn the fundamental physics, learn the scaling, learn the
FRC and the B to the 3.77 power, and learn those things way sooner than if you would have
just started on one megaproject and then waited decades to get to the answer.
There's a profound truth in that. Something about the constraints of pushing for the simple,
for the low cost, for the manufacturable, that pushes everything, pushes the science,
pushes innovation.
In fact, you should maybe explain
that you're, I believe,
on the seventh prototype.
Like, this is insane.
The rate of innovation here is insane.
Can you maybe speak to all the different prototypes
that you went through what it took to just iterate rapidly?
And maybe it would be really interesting for people.
Like, what can you say about the teams that's required
to make that happen?
Like, what kind of people are required to make that happen?
At that fast rate,
and we're not we're not talking about like software here we're talking about everything a full stack
all the way down to the physics at a hundred million degrees at speeds of one million
miles per hour i mean it's insane anyway so what uh how do you iterate the prototypes and what kind
of teams make it happen so at helium we've we've built uh seven systems um the first six
were a series of prototypes that we built end-to-in that were focused on scaling the process
of making these field reverse configurations, compressing them to thermonuclear fusion
conditions, and demonstrating that you can do fusion and then increasing the scale,
increasing the temperature and the energy. The very first ones were named after beer.
Actually, the most successful was the inductive plasmoid accelerator, the IPA.
And it was the first system that showed that the team could make these FRCs and hold on to them
and understand some of the stability criteria, the heating criteria.
And then we started increasing the field.
Now, okay, great, we can hold on to one of these FRCs.
We know how long, we know how to make them, but now can we squeeze on them and start doing fusion,
increasing in pressure and temperature.
What we noticed is, you know, machine after machine.
We always used Starbucks, we were in Redmond at the time, Redmond, Washington,
and Starbucks cups sitting on top of the machine as the, this is the scale.
They were too small to have a human, really, in the picture all the time.
So the Starbucks cup was enough.
And so then we switched to tall, grande, venty,
and then the biggest Trenta was the biggest system that came online in 2020.
That was a system that showed 100 million degrees.
and was the first system that did Deuterium and Helium-3 fusion.
In fact, as far as we know, the only bulk Deuterium-Helium-3 fusion that has been done
and also showed the 100 million-degree fusion temperatures from an FRC.
And throughout that time, the earliest work was government-funded, government grants,
SBIRs, and other type of government grants.
And actually, the team involved, myself and the rest of the founding team,
We're really good at winning government programs, doing fundamental science, but moving very quickly.
And there's a lot of ways to think about how to iterate and how to build quickly.
I want to talk about the teams first, and then we can talk about some of the technology pieces to do that.
But a lot of it is thinking about if your goal is to get the product, electricity, out to the world as soon as possible, then you should be looking at everything you do towards that lens.
And so that's thinking about the materials you choose.
You want to at every turn choose commonly available materials.
If you have to wait for supply chain, for an ultra-rare material, it's going to take you a lot more time.
And so do everything you can to an engineer a system that uses simple aluminum alloys, simple copper-op alloys.
And if you have to use tungsten, and maybe you have to use tungsten in some of your systems, which is a hard-to-find alloy, make sure you're using commonly available thicknesses of tungsten sheet.
You know, those kinds of engineering analyses and thought processes at every step.
And that's how we built these systems, from IPA to Venti, up to Trenta, was always looking at how do we build systems that are easy to build and mass produced.
Because this is the other thing that I don't know that early in my career I'd have predicted is that by making a hundred of a thing, you can actually make it faster than if you go make one of a thing.
And that because when you look at our fusion systems, we talked about these big magnets.
And you could build one giant, big complex, hard-to-make magnet that's heavy, and you have to move it around with a crane, and it requires very complex machining by ultra-rare CNCs.
Or you could then make that out of a composite of 100 smaller magnets.
Each of those magnets now can be made on a simple machine.
Each of these magnets can be picked up by a human.
They're light enough.
They can be made and manufactured and mass produced.
And that's what we did.
And that was our whole design philosophy on these machines is at every turn, how do we go faster?
A classic one that still to this day I push the team on is, again, thinking about how do you move fast, eBay.
We buy, and I don't know that I've ever said this public.
Oh, boy.
There we go.
This is great.
We spend a lot of time on eBay.
You got to find a way.
You got to move.
And here's an example.
We use a vacuum pump because in these systems, you've got to pull out all the air.
So we use a vacuum pump called a turbomolecular vacuum pump.
This is a commodity.
This is used in a variety of particle accelerators, scientific applications.
There are many of them.
They're robust.
They last a long time.
they also have a very small supply chain.
So if you want to buy a brand new turbo molecular pump, you can,
and you might wait nine months from the manufacturer
to go make one for you and deliver it for you.
But I can go today and get the same model that was made 10 years ago
and get it on eBay today, right now.
However, it might not work.
Like, you don't know yet there's some, you know,
how well it works or how clean it is or any of those things.
And so what we do is you don't go to eBay to save money.
It does.
It's cheaper, and that's great.
but you can also go and get three of those turbo pumps
that are sitting in eBay right now,
bring those in-house, test them.
Maybe only one of them meets the specifications you need.
But guess what?
You just got a pump in two weeks instead of nine months.
Yeah.
And you got it.
It's in the door and it's operational and it's running.
And you're moving.
See, I love that kind of stuff.
One of the only people I've really seen do that is Elon.
He put together that cluster in Memphis
in a matter of weeks,
which is nothing like that has ever been done before.
And this eBay way is really the kind of thing
that's required to make that happen as you shortcut the supply chain.
And everywhere you can, you still have to deliver the working product.
Right.
That cannot sacrifice the quality.
But do you really need the shiny brand new one when the used one is going to do the job?
And we think about that across the board.
Do we take the best plasma diagnostic, the most sophisticated plasma diagnostic in the world that that's 3% that has an accuracy of within 3%?
And it's going to take me three years, maybe a few million dollars to go build.
Or do I take a technology from 10 years ago that's 5% accurate?
That's good enough that I can go build in a month.
and the answer for us, for Heliana, for the team that we put together, is that scrappy.
I want to just solve the problem.
I don't need necessarily the best solution, but let's go make it happen.
And so that's something that we routinely do.
I think sometimes I have challenges with my academic colleagues on this, is that we have a difference of opinion.
Because at 3%, well, that's way better than 5%.
So shouldn't you do that?
You'll know your data better, but 5% is good enough.
Now, 50% would not be good enough.
And so that technology wouldn't have been applicable.
And so finding that middle ground is a hard thing to do.
And never compromising on the quality and the safety,
like it's got to work and it's got to be safe.
But can you still go fast?
But in general, just having a culture of pushing the rate of iterations here.
And building the team that wants to go build things.
Like everyone at Helion, at least the vast majority,
of Helion, we hire engineers, scientists, technicians, and machinists are hands-on builders.
The company at Helion is very weird for a fusion company. Today, we are 50% technicians, not
scientists. Nice. And we have a ton of scientists, because the science is critically important,
too, but they're supported by a huge manufacturing company. And our goal is to build as fast as
possible. Some of the other things we try to do there, vertically integrate. And this is, to
To your point on Elon Musk, like, this is one of things he's focused on at his companies, has been, how do you bring it inside the critical things that are going to drive timelines, the things you can't just go buy as a commodity product and get it here soon, and make sure that you can go build those fast?
And so we've done now a number of key vertical integrated manufacturing lines at Helion.
I think we may be the only fusion company with a conveyor belt.
actually our second one just came online
now where we have
so we have literally our production line
manufacturing power supplies
at Helion so that we can move
at maximum velocity
rather than finding an external
consultant or an external supplier
to go do those. Well, I love it.
Builder first company
and you're also thinking about manufacturing
throughout all of this.
I'm looking at the photo of Trenta.
It's beautiful.
And you can actually, I can point out
on this picture
one perfect example of what I'm talking about.
So on the end is a green structure, green fiberglass.
This is called G10.
Actually, ironically, one of the main structural elements we use is this G10 fiberglass material.
It's the same thing that's in PCB boards.
It's the same substrate that's in every circuit board.
And so we know it's strong.
It's good with electricity.
Only we get big pieces of it and machine it.
But even in the end, you can see the bolt.
halfway through. There's nine bolts in the middle there. The standard piece of G10 was not big
enough to fit the end of the machine. And so we could have had one custom manufacturer,
manufacturer a brand new piece of a custom size, build a new mold and a new machine. It would have
taken, I don't remember anymore now, but probably on the order of usually these are about
six to 12 months. Or I could go to a supplier off the shelf, have that delivered in a week,
and now machine it with all the bolts in between.
And then in-house have the G10 machine shop
that can now machine the bolt holes
to actually bolt those pieces together.
And so that took extra engineering
and having really clever and brilliant mechanical
and structural engineers to figure out how to do that
and still meet the needs of the fusion system.
But that's the kinds of teams
we try to build at Helion is folks that want to really get their hands dirty,
get hands-on, build things, and move quickly.
And everywhere you can, without sacrificing quality or safety, take shortcuts.
That's the name of the game.
We've got to get Fusion online as soon as possible.
Yeah, this is really exciting and really inspiring.
So I have to ask then, what timeline do you think?
Like first working out there nuclear fusion power plant.
When do you think?
Yeah.
So what we've been able to do is build rapidly.
Every few years, bring a new fusion system online.
In 2023, we signed a deal with Microsoft to build a power plant for Microsoft for one of their data centers.
And this is a power plant that is plugged into the grid, generating electricity from Fusion.
And with a very, very tough, ambitious timeline of 28 for the first electrons from that power plant.
And that power plant will be powering a data center.
That power plant will be powering the grid that the data center is plugged into.
And we can get into the details of how the power grid works and such.
But yes, so Microsoft will be buying the power from that power plant.
Props to Microsoft for like creating a hard deadline.
I love it.
They are.
They are.
And it is daily that we think about that deadline.
We had been working with them on and off through all of those machines,
through Grande, Vente, Trenta.
So they had seen us build, hit milestones, show that we can do fusion, scale up by orders of magnitude, and then access these advanced fusion fuels.
So they had seen all of those things and seen the manufacturing we built.
We're already right now building the manufacturing to support that power plant.
We're doing that today.
We started two years ago on doing the work around siting, around the interconnects.
How do you plug fusion in?
What does it look like?
How do you cite it?
What are the environmental consequences?
Who's going to regulate it?
All of those things.
So we spent a lot of time already and we're on our way.
And it's going to be hard.
Like, no joke about it.
This is tough.
And it's something that we think, I think about every day.
I'm sure you've had a bunch of people probably still tell you that this is a pipe dream.
Like, this is impossible.
Are there days that you and the team think that this is indeed impossible?
And then you wake up the next day and you're like, all right, we're going to do it anyway.
I mean, that's the thought process.
That's the mentality.
We're going to do it anyway.
Let's go do it.
The world needs it.
There's no physics reason this can't be done.
Now it's a question of how fast can you build it?
And can you engineer it to be as efficient as it needs to be?
And those are engineering and manufacturing are ridiculously hard challenges.
So do not short sell that.
But that's the goal.
And that's what we get up every day thinking about.
This is something I was actually just thinking about and talking with some of my team in the last few days.
We certainly have people that say, like, no, this can never be done.
And we had that before.
We had that at the very beginning of, I want to go merge these plasmas together.
And folks said, nope, that can never happen.
And we went off and did it.
And you can't compress an FRC because it's unstable.
In fact, I actually still hear that.
FRCs are unstable.
And I say, yes, I know.
Now, let me introduce you to S-Star over E.
And 20 years of studies on what we know,
about that and how we can combat that.
And so we've been able to show through lots of skepticism that we can still build and
iterate.
And there are things I don't know.
I'm like, let's just be totally honest.
As we're going to go build these things, we're going to discover new hard problems.
If we're not doing our job, if we're not, if we're not discovering new hard problems,
we probably didn't push hard enough.
We probably didn't push fast enough.
And I think that's really critical that that we build the team.
And we do the hiring to make sure that, like, everybody is doing that problem.
Now, that doesn't mean it's not a hard challenge and to keep folks motivated.
Helion now is over 500 people.
But when we built Trenta, we're 50 people.
So now there's, you know, over 300 humans working at Helion that didn't see us build a system from a computer model, bring it online, and do,
fusion with it. But even already for Polaris, there are lots of humans that started for our
seventh generation system. When we were running Trenta, doing fusion, you know, they were able to see
that, see the measurements, know we were doing fusion, but yet this next machine was just a simulation.
And so seeing that get built, seeing that, like, it's just awe-inspiring for folks. And I'll tell you
the first time that it comes online and flashes pink and you see that fusion glow, it's all
inspiring. It's all inspiring. I love that. The fusion glow, yeah. Everybody changes their desktop,
their windows desktop backgrounds to now the fusion background, the plasma glow. So how can you
actually see it? A couple of things. So one, to get access to it, we have windows. We have small
windows all the way around that we look into it with cameras, spectroscopy, lasers, other kinds
of scientific diagnostics that we use to measure. And so you get, you see the light emission through
that, but also it's very bright.
And so the actual vacuum vessels themselves that we use are ceramic.
There are some versions of silicon and oxygen, typically quartz, but there's also some other
centered materials, and it's so bright that they can shine through those materials.
And so what you see is you see the light of, not fusion.
When fusion's happening, thermonuclear fusion is so hot that the light is in the x-ray
spectrum, and the human eye can't see that.
but as you're as you're as you're as you're that ice cooled one million degree plasma when you're just getting started it's emitting photons in a range and light in a range that humans can see and so you see that bright purple fuchsia color and this would be if you're doing actual cameras it'd be like extremely high speed cameras that kind of thing we have high speed ones and low speed ones the traditional slr cameras which the ones that represent the right color all they catch is the light the integrated light
flash. They don't know, they can't see the plasma forming, accelerating, compressing. They can't
see any of those things. They just see all of it integrated into one bright flash. But the high
speed cameras, they can see that. And so the high speed cameras we can use to actually measure that.
In fact, we put special filters on them to measure different wavelengths of light. So we can tell,
is it the hydrogen, is it the heliums? Is it the helium three? Who is emitting the light? When are they
emit it, what particles are emitting the light and wind. And so by using those advanced
diagnostics, we can now take movies of that, though it's not, it's not as great as just seeing
that flash. Yeah, I mean, it's beautiful, right, that human beings are able to create something
like that. It's truly beautiful. Just out of curiosity, are there some interesting intricacies
connecting nuclear fusion power plant to the power grid? Like, is there some, like,
constraints to the old-schoolness
of the power grid,
let's say in the United States.
Like, how do you get
that Microsoft thing you mentioned?
How do you get to the,
from the nuclear fusion power plant
to a computer with some GPUs?
How do we make that connection?
Or is that a trivial thing?
None of this is trivial.
But there are, I think, simple ways,
and there's some really interesting
engineering ways to do this.
So just from the fundamental basics, as we're doing fusion, we push back on the magnetic field,
we recharge these capacitors that start where the electricity started from.
And that electricity then sits on a capacitor at high voltage, DC voltage, that's steady.
At that point, it's reasonably easy to make 60 hertz power, make traditional AC power.
It's the same way as you can take electricity in a battery and use an inverter and just
convert that to AC power. And large-scale grid inverters, we know how to do pretty well.
One of the sort of like unique things about a pulsed version of this, because it's pulsed and a
repetition rate between one and ten times a second, we can adjust the power output. And so as the
grid needs more power, we can actually dial it up and down. And we've been able to demonstrate that
with our fusion systems. The smaller ones, the smaller plasma systems, we've gone from zero,
from off to all the way up to 100 times a second
and shown we can do 100 hertz operation.
In fact, that system we ran for
over a billion operations
and just ran it steady all day long.
So each individual pulse is independent in some sense.
Each individual pulse is different
where you put in your fuel, you do fusion,
you exhaust it through those pumps from eBay
and then power output and electricity output.
But there's probably some more clever ways to do this.
And when we founded Helion, the goal was,
as to build low-cost, base load electricity.
And what we started to see, working with Microsoft,
working with others now,
that data centers are going to be one of the biggest power needs in the future.
And we know that's coming up.
And what's really unique is that power in this form is direct recovery,
not the steam turbine part, but direct electricity,
is already DC, which is steady,
which is what computers really want anyway.
And so are there really unique ways,
to take DC power sitting on this capacitor,
and rather than going AC to the grid
and having all these transmission losses,
just going direct DC to the data center.
Can you plug right in?
And so that's some of the things
that my team is looking at now
is can you do that direct DC conversion
at super high efficiencies and run those GPUs directly?
That would be really powerful.
We could figure out how to do it,
but those are some of the things
that I think there might be some unique ways
that fusion and data centers can really couple together.
There's a whole cooling part 2 at 2.
Most of my cooling is cooling semiconductors
and cooling power switching,
just like a data center.
So there's a lot of interesting engineering ways
that we can bring those two together.
So a deeper integration between the power plant
and the thing that is powering.
And it does seem like the future quite possibly
a lot of the energy
that's needed will be for compute,
for AI-related applications.
So if you just look out into the future,
10, 20, 50 years from now,
do you see nuclear fusion as a thing
that powers these gigantic data centers
of millions of GPUs,
which is basically the surface of the Earth
covered in compute
and nuclear fusion power plants?
Maybe that's 100 years out.
So when I talk to AI experts, they talk pretty routinely about the power needs for AI.
And in fact, in the same way in manufacturing that the cost of any one thing asymptotes to the raw material,
for AI, the cost of computation, asymptotes to the power, to the cost of the electricity.
And even more, that electricity is concentrated.
It's in that AI data center, that brain.
where all the power is. And you really want a lot of high energy density. You want power generation
right there on site. So it seems like just take those two facts a really nice match between
fusion, which is baseload, high energy density can be cited most places and a data center,
which is going to be high energy requirements in a local location and large amounts of it.
There's been predictions recently from energy institutes that suggest we will have growth that rather than a 2% growth per year in electricity, maybe a 4% or 6% growth in electricity due to data center use.
I think that is probably wildly underestimating where we're moving.
And so the idea that AI can grow human cognition and our ability.
to solve problems, we can't let it be limited by power.
And so I'm going to push as hard as I can so that that that's not the limit.
Do you ever think about like 2050 or something like that?
I know you're focused on a few years out, just getting a fusion power plant working,
but do you ever think about like even longer term future?
You see, by what year do you think there'll be over 1,000 nuclear fusion power plants?
So I tell the team that if we demonstrate fusion one time, and that's it, then we failed.
But that's not enough.
That's not the universe is powered by fusion.
Humans need to be harnessing this and can harness this for our society, for the good of society, for the good of technology.
And so that's something that we push towards.
And in fact, it's baked into how.
we design these machines.
Coils are mass produced,
capacitors are mass produced,
and we make them all across the board
is thinking about not what the next system's going to be,
but making sure we're building the manufacturing
and the infrastructure to build all of those systems.
So we had a call from the White House
a number of years ago for the bold Decatal study in fusion
of how do we get fusion?
And it was Helion and a variety of other companies
from the fusion industry.
And it's pretty awesome to be able to say
there's a fusion industry now.
That it's not just a one-off thing
or there's a fusion experiment
or somebody has a prototype.
But like there's an industry.
Yeah.
That Helion has competitors.
That's great.
I've never heard anyone so excited to have competitors,
but yes, that's like a serious thing.
That's a real possibility, yeah.
And the goal was how do we not just demonstrate fusion
in the next decade, but meaningfully deploy it
and start to answer,
we have 4,000 gigawatts of installed fossil fuel capacity.
How do we start replacing that with fusion in a meaningful way?
And how do we get to not just making a generator every few years,
but we want a giga factory of these fusion generators rolling off the line,
one a month, one a week, one a day?
That's the kind of plans that I task my supply chain team with, like,
how do you do this?
How do we actually go build this?
How do we go build a gigafactory so we can have 50 megawatt generators coming off the line, being deployed on a truck, and then driving off the factory every day?
And it's a tough challenge.
I see what others have been able to do in rockets, in electric vehicles, turning around huge factories.
We know this can be done.
And so for Fusion, the call is there.
And the market is there, too.
If you can get electricity generators cheap enough, then it's worth doing.
Yeah, I mean, all of this is really exciting and inspiring what you're doing,
and obviously the world needs it.
And the more cheap energy we have of this kind that we describe clean,
and it's not constrained to geographical locations and so on,
first of all, that alleviates a lot of the tension in geopolitics,
but second of all, it enables a lot of the technological breakthroughs on the AI side
on all the different things that we use compute for.
It's really, really exciting.
So, yeah, I hope there's like millions of them in the coming decades.
And so if we can get to that, if we can get to making a generator a day,
you're now talking about hundreds a year and you're deploying.
And deploying them is also hard at this scale.
How do you go and deploy power plants and deploy generators at this?
scale and do it quickly. Interestingly, data centers are a little bit of a nicer challenge in that
way because we wouldn't build one 50 megawatt system and have to go build a site for it. We'll
build a site and put 100 of them on that site and have large amounts of power for that large
data center. And so that in some ways, it's actually in the chicken and egg problem of how do you
go deploy hundreds or thousands of fusion generators, data centers are an interesting application
where very immediately you need a lot of power in a very small area and you can go you can go do that now
what does that mean that means i'm going to need more than two conveyor belts that's for sure yeah yeah
well you have to i mean manufacturing is really hard but like you said the fascinating thing is
it's hard but as you're doing it you figure out all the other things the science and the physics and the
everything everything the innovation is accelerated when you have to manufacture at scale
It's actually fascinating why you see that in the space industry as well.
When do we humans get to Cardiff type 1 civilization status, and when do we get to a Cardiff
type 2?
So the Cardiff shift scale, Cardiff's type 1 civilization is when humans are either catching
or generating as much power as what's incident on the earth from the sun.
Type 2 is the next big one where you're catching as much energy from all.
all the way around the sun.
So massive amounts of energy.
And a lot of times people talk about it as incident,
as in you had solar panels,
the size of the entire planet,
blocking all of the sun.
But I think really you should be thinking about it as,
what can we generate?
What can we make here on Earth?
And what we know is that, you know,
we're only a fraction right now of Cartierchib type one,
and we got some work to do.
And there's not a lot of technologies that can get there,
just from the point of view of the fuel.
But if, as some research say that there's
a hundred million to a billion years of fusion fuel on the earth,
we have room to go.
And that's at today's use.
So 100 times today's use, we still have tons of fuel.
Let's go do it.
And what does that unlock?
What does it unlock to have power 100 times the output
that we actually do here on Earth right now?
And I think that's pretty transformational.
Do we have those huge AI data centers?
Do we have brains they can now think at rapid speeds
and now innovate?
I think that that's a pretty powerful future.
Yeah, I could just imagine a giant AI brain and rockets
just constantly shipping more and more humans out into space,
into colonizing space and we're expanding out into the universe.
I mean, obviously there's a lot to be concerned about.
It's technology in itself.
is always a double-edged sword.
There's always a concern that we humans
in the power we create
will also destroy ourselves
in obvious ways
and less than obvious ways.
I've been spending a lot of times
in a lot of time in nature
and you become distinctly aware
that there's something truly special
about the simplicity,
the balance that is achieved by nature,
and in some sense
where he disturbed that balance
by creating sophisticated,
technologies, but in another sense, we're building something in the spirit of nature that's
more and more beautiful and allows us humans to flourish in richer and richer ways. So double
a sword. I think a lot about how, what does vast amounts of low-cost energy, low-cost electricity
enable, and how does that work with nature? And if you have power, and this is why one of the
reasons we love fusion is that's energy dense. So a 50 megawatt facility, we believe, fits in a 27,000
square foot building on the order of an acre for 50 megawatts. And compare that to solar would be
2,000 acres, at least in Seattle. And what you can do there is transformational. And a lot of folks
talk about desalination and clean water so that we can be in places where there's not a lot of water
and those things.
I actually think about food, ironically,
is that how much of the Earth's surface
that used to be nature is now farmland.
And we need it.
Like, we're going to grow food
because humans need to eat,
and that's really critical,
but it's about five feet tall all over the earth.
Why can't you do it at 500 feet?
Why can't you build a building
that where you're actually growing in the building,
you're growing plants?
I spend a lot of time thinking about growing plants, ironically,
at high densities of food densities
so that we can eat and we can exist
and we can coexist in a way
that's energy dense and rich.
You mentioned actually going to space.
How do we go to space now?
We take methane fuels or hydrogen fuels
and we burn them and we launch a rocket.
There's all kinds of cool beamed rocket technologies
that I looked at early in my career
where you can beam microwaves
and so you have a microwave craft
that doesn't have to burn any fuel.
And so if you have really dense, really good power on Earth,
you can beam it to that microwave craft.
It can now use electricity as its rocket fuel.
And so there's some really powerful, interesting things you can do.
Even deep space, it gets also more enabling,
but even just launching from Earth.
And so I think it opens up things we don't really even think about,
but it's just been theorized, wow,
if I had a massive amounts of power and a small,
place that is low cost. This is what it could do. But I'm excited by what it can unlock that
even we can think about now, but even what we can't think about. Or we don't know yet.
Since you mentioned propulsion, is there some interesting use, possibly use of nuclear fusion
in propulsion, whether it's getting off of Earth or in going into deep space?
I mean, that's, honestly, in a lot of ways, that's how I got into fusion, is thinking about that
intersection of energy and space travel. And when you are in the solar system around Earth's
orbit, collecting the sun's energy makes a lot of sense. And it's there. It's free. When you're in
space, you get a lot more of it because the atmosphere is not blocking it. And so that's why
spacecraft run on solar panels. But if you want to go further out, the sun's irradiance falls off
as R squared, radius squared, and it's a long way out there. It doesn't take very long before
or there is not a lot of energy anywhere from the sun.
And so you have to bring it with you.
And in space, mass is expensive.
Mass is hard.
That's the rocket equation.
And so being able to bring high energy density fuel is really exciting.
And that's what Fusion enables.
But here's one of the challenges.
If you make electricity from Fusion using a steam cycle,
you now need to have somewhere you need something cool.
So you get hot water.
you have to be able to cool it.
And in space, there's nothing to cool.
There's no working fluid to cool off of.
And so actually, a lot of the steam-based systems in fusion don't make sense for space.
And so that's where some of this direct energy, this energy efficiency matters.
It actually comes to some of the origin story of the team that founded Helion.
Before spinning off Helion to focus only on fusion, we worked on a mix of things.
advanced materials, rocket propulsion, fusion,
fusion rockets, fusion materials, all of those things.
Nice.
And one thing that people in the aerospace field know,
especially if you're in deep space,
you can't waste anything.
That every watt of electricity you make, you better use
because it was expensive to get it or the solar panel.
Every ounce of, every jewel of heat, every watt of heat you make,
you have to reject with a radiator, and it's super expensive and heavy.
And so you build in space as efficient as possible.
You recirculate your water and your air and all of those things.
You're efficient.
And it's something we brought into thinking about fusion, energy efficiency,
is that you want to, if my goal is to make the product, what's the product?
The product is electricity.
Don't waste any of it.
Recover every watt you can by recovering electricity directly.
recover every electricity from the fusion process as efficiently as you can.
And you end up with, just like in space, systems that are smaller,
have higher performance, and can deliver more whatever the mission is.
And in our case, the mission is electricity.
When you look out there at the stars, I'm really confused about what's going on,
because I think there is for sure thousands, if not millions,
of advanced alien civilizations out there.
I'm really confused why we have not, in a definitive way, met any of them.
So again, continuing the pot-head questions.
What energy source do you think they're using, if what I'm saying is true, that there is alien
civilizations out there?
Do you think it's, like, pretty certain that they, in order to expand out into the cosmos,
they would be using nuclear fusion?
It's hard to imagine anything else.
That right now, where does energy in the universe come from?
and it comes from fusion. It comes from stars, and we know that that's the process. And so whether
they're harnessing the star itself, Kardeshev type 2, or are they bringing fusion along because
they want to go somewhere and they're bringing it with them to go visit, I think that that's pretty
that's pretty likely. You bring up the Fermi paradox. How come we don't see alien civilizations,
even if it's infinitesimally small chance that there is life on anyone planet and infinitesimally
small, that life grows into intelligent life.
There are, however, almost infinite planets around infinite stars in our galaxy that have been
around for vastly longer than we've been around, but we don't see it.
And I think that's a question that many scientists and everyone has wrestled with over the years.
I mean, I'm very scared by the implications.
of that. The scary thing is that, to the point that we made earlier, as we become more
and more technological advanced, we end up destroying ourselves. Like, there could be things
we unlock, like nuclear weapons, but plus plus. Like, new things that happen as you develop
super advanced systems that close to 100% probability destroy ourselves, destroying the intelligent
being the kind of intelligent being that's ambitious enough to keep innovating will eventually
destroy itself will be one explanation and that's scary and that that should be a sobering
that's at least an inspiring sobering thought to be careful with the stuff we create but i also
just look at humans we create dangerous stuff and then figure out like sometimes almost like
last minute how to not destroy ourselves
We're good with deadlines.
We're good with deadlines.
And we're good at, like, surviving.
I mean, life as we know it on Earth seems to find a way.
And intelligent life, as we know, a human life seems to find a way.
We do a lot of painful things along the way.
But in the end, we somehow survive.
It's interesting.
There's something in the human spirit that allows us to survive.
So I have, like, a lot of optimism.
about the super powerful technologies that we create
will eventually lead to us still surviving
for thousands of years.
But then, like, why the aliens not here though?
So maybe it's also possible
that it's really difficult to traverse space.
Maybe it really is that difficult.
The physics makes it not easy.
There's a lot of space, and it's just hard to travel.
I think I, as I have gone further and further
and building fusion systems that
work. I've become more optimistic around the Fermi paradox specifically. And there's there is
the, there's several of them. I think you're referring to something called the Great Filter.
Something happens that filters out life. The dark forest is another philosophy around sure it's
out there, but everybody's hiding because they don't want to be noticed. But I think about something
else, actually. The philosophy that I've always loved, and I'm going to pronounce this wrong,
so I apologize.
Matrochka brains is that,
and that's Kardashev level 2,
that civilizations get so advanced
and they focus not on expanding physically
and expanding in space
and expanding their reach by planting flags in new places,
but grow their cognition,
grow their ability to think,
they grow their brain,
they grow their intellect.
And I feel like in the last few years,
we've seen a massive trend
that maybe this is the thing that happens
and that we do grow our intellect
and we grow the intellect of the species
by AI and advanced tools
and as a society
can just get smart enough
that we don't need to go plant those flags everywhere.
And so the Matroitska brain is a Dyson sphere
where a civilization has covered the entire sun
in essentially solar panels or collects its light in some way, and uses all of that power
to power intelligence, to power computers, to power brains. And I think we're away from
that, a ways away from that, but maybe AI and fusion together gets you actually along that path
sooner. And I'm excited by that outcome of the Fermi paradox. And then at that point, those
civilizations have a star that you can't find anymore because it's all covered and are there
thinking and growing their intellects rather than actually having to physically expand.
Yeah, exploring and expanding in the realm of cognition and consciousness versus in the realm of
space and time as weak. We 21st century colonizer humans think like. Maybe 22nd century humans
will be thinking fundamentally differently. Yeah, that's a beautiful, beautiful vision of the future.
Speaking of beauty, you've been doing a lot of really interesting things in a lot of interesting
disciplines. What to you is a ridiculous question, is the most beautiful idea in physics and
nuclear engineering, in nuclear fusion and power plants, what ideas you just step back
and are in awe of? I'm continuously in awe.
that it works.
Yeah.
And I know that sounds a little silly to say,
but the more that I learned in my career around the balance of exactly the right
temperatures where life works, exactly the right balance between the electromagnetic
force and the strong force, those are things that
It's hard to imagine are accidental.
And so we talk about how beautiful nature is,
but then you look at what each of the leaves on the tree really is
and each of the cells and each of the atoms
and each of the quantum substructure of that atom.
And I'm just, I'm all amazed that all the pieces come together.
We humans are somehow able to find that perfect balance
or it just works.
Just works.
Last minute sometimes,
but it does work.
The kind of deadlines you're operating,
the group of brilliant people
that you're working with
are operating under is just,
it stresses me out.
But it excites me,
so I'm deeply grateful that you're doing this work.
You're one of the people building an exciting future.
So thank you for doing that,
and thank you so much for talking today.
Thank you very much.
It's been fun.
Thanks for listening to this conversation with David Curitly.
To support this podcast, please check out our sponsors in the description where you can also find links to contact me, ask questions, give feedback, and so on.
And now, let me leave you with some words from the great John F. Kennedy.
We choose to do these things, not because they are easy, but because they are hard.
Thank you for listening, and I hope to see you next time.
Thank you.
