“While there will be important materials and engineering questions that will need to be addressed before scaling up to a commercial reactor, we will address the most important physics questions that could put us in a path to a demo reactor in years, not decades. We are very excited to be working on a truly transformational technology that will enable a virtually inexhaustible energy source with very small impact to our planet," says Romero-Talamas.
UMBC-led team receives Dept. of Energy grant to advance nuclear fusion energy research
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August 10, 2020 at 9:48 AM
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