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This 34-year-old’s start-up backed by Bill Gates and Jeff Bezos aims to make nearly unlimited clean energy
CNBC ^ | Published Fri, Feb 12 202110:13 AM ESTUpdated Fri, Feb 12 20218:21 PM EST | Catherine Clifford

Posted on 02/15/2021 7:11:03 AM PST by Red Badger

After Brandon Sorbom graduated from Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles in 2010, he decided to take the “couple of thousand dollars” he had saved and his credit card (he had 0% interest for a year) and fly to Boston.

Brandon Sorbom, chief scientific officer at Commonwealth Fusion SystemsPhoto courtesy Commonwealth Fusion Systems

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Sorbom wanted to get his Ph.D. in nuclear fusion but had been rejected from all five programs he applied to, including the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. MIT had told Sorbom, who studied electrical engineering and engineering physics in undergrad, that he didn’t have enough hands-on lab experience.

So Sorbom headed there to try to get a job at the school’s fusion energy lab.

It was “probably a really stupid strategy looking back,” Sorbom says. “But I was 22 and I was like, ‘Oh sure, I’ll be able to make this work.’”

Brandon Sorbom in 2010 as an undergrad at Loyola Marymount University with the fusor he constructed as an undergrad..Photo courtesy Brandon Sorbom

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Sorbom did make it work: He got the job, and 12 years later, Sorbom has his doctorate from MIT and is co-founder and chief scientific officer of Commonwealth Fusion Systems, a rapidly growing company spun out of Sorbom and his co-founders’ research. CFS aims to commercialize, fusion, a safe and virtually limitless source of “clean energy,” to combat climate change. The company is funded by the likes of Jeff Bezos and Bill Gates by way of energy innovation investment fund Breakthrough Energy.

Why fusion? At the heart of Commonwealth Fusion Systems is nuclear fusion. It is the process by which two atoms slam into each other and fuse into one heavier atom, generating energy. It’s what powers the sun.

Fusion has many upsides: First, it’s clean. (Most energy used around the world is generated by burning carbon-based materials that release gasses into the atmosphere, warming the planet.)

It is also a virtually unlimited resource. Other clean energies are fundamentally limited — wind energy depends on the wind blowing and solar energy depends on the sun shining, for example.

Plus, nuclear fusion is generally safe, so reactors can be located near populations centers or cities, which helps with infrastructure. (That’s unlike nuclear fission, or splitting an atom to generate energy, which is the same process used in an atom bomb. Fission generates dangerous radioactive waste, and some high-profile accidents have caused massive destruction, but nuclear fission power plants currently generate about 20% of the electricity used in the U.S.)

22:52 The future of nuclear power VIDEO AT LINK......................

Then there’s fusion’s potential. Because an isotope of hydrogen is the main fuel of fusion, the right technology could one day make a glass of water, aka H2O, foster enough fusion reactions to generate the amount of energy consumed by one person for a lifetime, according to CFS.

“Fusion can provide both electricity generation and heat — meaning that it can meet all sorts of energy demand, including to: power homes, recharge batteries, create clean fuels, drive chemical processes, or other industrial uses,” says Andrew Holland, executive director of the Fusion Industry Association.

It will “fit directly into existing grids, and not require significant upgrades,” Holland says. Ideally, once scaled, fusion energy would eventually be comparable in cost to the current cost of electricity.

On the other hand, fusion has one big problem: With the present technology, fusion usurps all the energy it creates to sustain the reaction, leaving no “net energy” to power other things.

A 35-country collaboration in southern France is working to change that by building the largest fusion machine on the planet, called Iter (Latin for “the way”). It’s “the most expensive science experiment that humanity has ever tried, on the order of $20 billion,” according to Egemen Kolemen, an assistant professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering at Princeton University.

But for Sorbom and the rest of the Commonwealth Fusion Systems team, Iter is too expensive and is taking too long to significantly affect the looming global warming crisis.

The CFS solution Fusion will one day provide zero-emissions energy at large scale, says Holland. But getting there won’t be easy.

Creating and capturing the energy of the sun is delicate. A special form of hydrogen has to be heated until it gets to the fourth state of matter, plasma.

“If you heat a solid up, it turns into a liquid. If you heat that liquid up, it turns into a gas. If you heat that gas up, it turns into a plasma,” he says, and “you get a charge soup of particles.”

Plasma is an extremely fragile state of matter. If interrupted, the fusion reaction stops. So scientists developed a machine known by the Russian acronym tokamak, which uses magnetic fields to hold a doughnut of plasma safely in a container.

Research by Sorbom and his colleagues focuses on improving the tokamak, specifically by “making better and better magnets,” Sorbom says.

Better and stronger magnets mean better insulation for the plasma, and the more efficiently the plasma can be heated up, the more energy that can be generated, eventually producing net energy. In the machines CFS is working on, temperatures will be around 100 million degrees Celsius, which is roughly 180 million degrees Fahrenheit.

Though CFS’ founders were initially funded by MIT and the U.S. Department of Energy, Sorbom and his colleagues eventually turned to capitalism, launching Commonwealth Fusion Systems in June 2018.

So far, Commonwealth Fusion Systems has raised more than $215 million, with its most recent funding round announced in May. Breakthrough Energy Ventures, a fund with investments from Gates, Bezos, Ray Dalio, Richard Branson, Jack Ma, Michael Bloomberg and others, has contributed to Commonwealth Fusion Systems, as has The Engine, a venture capital company associated with MIT. CFS says the current funding will take the company through 2021, but it will seek additional funding.

CFS will make money by designing and building nuclear fusion power plants for customers, which could begin to produce revenue this decade, according to CFS communications director Kristen Cullen.

Brandon Sorbom working at Commonwealth Fusion Systems Brandon Sorbom working at Commonwealth Fusion SystemsPhoto courtesy Commonwealth Fusion Systems. Photo Credit: Douglas Levy CFS says when fusion ultimately replaces other power sources, it will be competitive in one of the largest markets in the global economy.

CFS is also working on other commercial applications of its magnet technology, like in MRI machines or wind turbines.

For now, its next milestone is the debut of its magnet technology this summer, and then by 2025 developing a SPARC, a machine that would demonstrate that CFS technology can generate net energy.

From there, CFS would move on to develop ARC, its first fusion power plant connected to the power grid. CFS says it expects to be making fusion energy on the grid “in the early 2030s.”

This is a rendering of the SPARC, a tokamak machine currently being designed by the team from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Commonwealth Fusion Systems, a which aims to create and confine a plasma which will create energy with fusion. This is a rendering of the SPARC, a tokamak machine currently being designed by the team from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Commonwealth Fusion Systems, a which aims to create and confine a plasma which will create energy with fusion.CFS/MIT-PSFC — CAD Rendering by T. Henderson There is a lot that Sorbom and the CFS team have to accomplish before fusion is brought to market on any large scale. But industry watchers are optimistic. The Fusion Industry Association’s Holland hopes innovation in the next decade will make commercialization possible by the 2030s, a timeline that is “soon enough to matter for the climate crisis,” he says.

And though government-backed projections for fusion commercialization are a bit longer term, UCLA physics professor Troy Carter thinks a shorter timeline is possible.

“With the private and public sectors working together, I think we can make this happen, but we need to start now, and more investment is needed,” says Carter. He chaired a committee that published a report for the Energy Department outlining a strategic plan to build a pilot fusion plant by the 2040s.

Sorbom is also encouraged by the Biden administration’s focus on climate change, but he’s also realistic. “Climate change is a really big problem,” Sorbom says. “People think the pandemic is bad, but if you look at projections of what [climate change] could look like by 2050 ... it’s pretty scary.”

Indeed, “fusion power is a solution to global warming,” says Holland. “The challenge is getting it onto the grid fast enough.”


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Government; Technical
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1 posted on 02/15/2021 7:11:03 AM PST by Red Badger
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To: Red Badger
“Climate change is a really big problem,” Sorbom says.

Don't give that guy any money. He's an idiot.

2 posted on 02/15/2021 7:13:30 AM PST by ClearCase_guy ("I see you did something -- why you so racist?")
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To: Red Badger

100 million degrees Celsius


3 posted on 02/15/2021 7:14:07 AM PST by butlerweave
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To: Red Badger

“which uses magnetic fields to hold a doughnut of plasma safely in a container”

You had me at doughnut.


4 posted on 02/15/2021 7:15:03 AM PST by Larry Lucido (Donate! Don't just post clickbait!)
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To: butlerweave

So it’s like pizza sauce?


5 posted on 02/15/2021 7:18:06 AM PST by EEGator
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To: Red Badger

So, they’re going to selflessly donate this breakthrough technology for free to all mankind, right?


6 posted on 02/15/2021 7:18:45 AM PST by D_Idaho ("For we wrestle not against flesh and blood...")
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To: butlerweave

Right under our feet according to fat albert of gore.


7 posted on 02/15/2021 7:18:55 AM PST by rktman (Destroy America from within? Check! WTH? Enlisted USN 1967 to end up with this?)
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To: Red Badger
Doesn’t matter. You could have limitless free, no pollution energy, and the Marxists would regulate it away to state control. It is always about power and control. No solution that involves freedom and individual autonomy will ever be allowed.
8 posted on 02/15/2021 7:19:41 AM PST by Truth29
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To: Red Badger

“With the present technology, fusion usurps all the energy it creates to sustain the reaction, leaving no “net energy” to power other things.”

This has always been the problem with fusion. But the premise of the story is fusion is the solution to all of our energy and climate change issues. But until this can be addressed it is worthless.


9 posted on 02/15/2021 7:19:51 AM PST by Trinity5
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To: Red Badger

Not to worry. Gates has a lock on all the universe supply of unobtanium.


10 posted on 02/15/2021 7:21:46 AM PST by Da Coyote
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To: ClearCase_guy

No, thinking it is is a big problem. Scads of brilliant, dumbass PhDs out there. 😯


11 posted on 02/15/2021 7:21:46 AM PST by rktman (Destroy America from within? Check! WTH? Enlisted USN 1967 to end up with this?)
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To: Red Badger
Does he realize anything that mentions "nuclear" the neo-Marxists are against?

Chaaa dude, like totally.

>

12 posted on 02/15/2021 7:22:10 AM PST by GrandJediMasterYoda (As long as Hillary Clinton remains free equal justice under the law will never exist in the USA)
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To: Red Badger
Create sustainable fusion where the net energy produced is greater than the energy required to initiate it and we'll talk.

Until then it's all hypothetical blather.

13 posted on 02/15/2021 7:22:35 AM PST by traderrob6
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To: Trinity5

I’m pretty sure Elizabeth Shue solved this in 1997.


14 posted on 02/15/2021 7:24:39 AM PST by EEGator
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To: Red Badger

> CFS says it expects to be making fusion energy on the grid “in the early 2030s.”

So that’s 10-12 years assuming no hiccups along the way.

I wish these guys great success, and will point out that commercial fusion has been 20 years away for the last 50 years.


15 posted on 02/15/2021 7:24:44 AM PST by FreedomPoster (Islam delenda est)
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To: Trinity5

Fusion has been 15 years away my entire long life.


16 posted on 02/15/2021 7:24:53 AM PST by mad_as_he$$ (When will the first modern Auto-da-fe happen?)
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To: Red Badger

It sounds like another startup doing incremental improvements to the tokamak design. It hardly seems worth writing an article about.


17 posted on 02/15/2021 7:25:04 AM PST by posterchild
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To: butlerweave
"100 million degrees Celsius."

That is almost as hot as the cheese in a jalapeño popper!

18 posted on 02/15/2021 7:25:22 AM PST by wildcard_redneck ( COVID lockdowns are the Establishment's attack on the middle class and our Republic)
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To: EEGator

More like the cheese inside a microwaved hot pocket.


19 posted on 02/15/2021 7:26:06 AM PST by throwthebumsout
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To: rktman
What he really thinks is unknown. What is known is that he knows what to say to get his trough filled.

It would be nice if a private company came up with this first, before the big government projects.

20 posted on 02/15/2021 7:26:10 AM PST by pierrem15 ("Massacrez-les, car le seigneur connait les siens" )
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