WEST Tokamak Reactor

- 23 Feb 2025
In News:
The WEST Tokamak reactor in southern France has set a new world record by sustaining a nuclear fusion plasma for 1,337 seconds (22 minutes and 17 seconds), surpassing the previous record of 1,066 seconds held by China’s EAST reactor by 25%. This achievement is a major milestone in the global quest for clean, limitless energy through nuclear fusion.
About Nuclear Fusion
- Nuclear Fusion is the process of combining two light atomic nuclei (typically deuterium and tritium) to form a heavier nucleus, releasing vast amounts of energy.
- The mass defect (loss of mass) in the fusion process converts into energy, as per Einstein’s equation E=mc2E = mc^2E=mc2.
- This reaction occurs in the plasma state—a hot, ionized gas consisting of free electrons and atomic nuclei.
How Tokamak Reactors Work
- A Tokamak is a doughnut-shaped (toroidal) magnetic confinement device that replicates the Sun’s fusion process.
- It uses superconducting magnetic coils to confine and heat the plasma to temperatures exceeding 50 million°C, about three times hotter than the Sun's core.
- Fusion reactors inject external power (WEST used 2 MW) to maintain the plasma and prevent it from touching reactor walls.
WEST Reactor: Key Highlights
- Operated by the French Alternative Energies and Atomic Energy Commission (CEA).
- Aims to simulate long-duration, high-temperature plasma conditions.
- Reached a plasma state sustained for over 22 minutes at 50 million°C.
- Contributes critical insights and validation to the ongoing ITER project, the world’s largest nuclear fusion experiment also based in southern France.
Significance of the Achievement
To make fusion viable for electricity generation, three key conditions must be met:
- High temperature – to overcome electrostatic repulsion between nuclei.
- Sustained confinement time – achieved by WEST.
- Sufficient plasma density – to ensure high collision rates.
Maintaining plasma for extended durations is crucial for transitioning from experimental reactors to commercial fusion energy systems.
Advantages of Nuclear Fusion
- High Energy Output: Produces 4x more energy per kg of fuel than fission, and nearly 4 million times more than fossil fuels.
- Environmentally Clean: Emits no greenhouse gases or long-lived radioactive waste. Only byproducts are inert helium and neutrons.
- Abundant Fuel Supply: Fusion uses deuterium (from seawater) and tritium, eliminating the need for uranium mining.
- Inherent Safety: Fusion reactions are inherently safe as they cannot trigger uncontrolled chain reactions, unlike fission.
Fusion vs. Fission: A Comparison
Aspect Nuclear Fusion Nuclear Fission
Process Combines light nuclei Splits heavy nuclei
Fuel Deuterium and Tritium Uranium or Plutonium
Energy Output Extremely high Moderate
Waste Minimal and short-lived Long-lived radioactive waste
Emissions No greenhouse gases Potential radiation hazards
Safety No risk of meltdown Risk of runaway reactions/meltdowns
Global Perspective
- Over 200 tokamaks are operational globally.
- The ITER project is set to become the centerpiece of global fusion research.
- Recent breakthroughs like those at WEST provide a technical roadmap for future commercial reactors.