Cryptonix Posted September 5, 2013 Author Posted September 5, 2013 (edited) Bumpp Edited September 5, 2013 by Cryptonix
John Cuthber Posted September 6, 2013 Posted September 6, 2013 Your post doesn't make sense so there's no point in bumping it. You would do better if you explained what you thought 1K meant.
Enthalpy Posted September 14, 2013 Posted September 14, 2013 (edited) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helium-3 obtained from decay of tritium, produced itself in nuclear reactors by neutron irradiation of lithium. Shortage of both tritium and helium-3 in sight, so new sources are sought by the nuclear industry, despite the present thread looking unprofessional. The Wiki articke cites existing and prospective uses but doesn't tell what the main ones are. Fusion in tokamaks and laser reactors is out of reach; capabilities of the Z-machine aren't widely public. I'd imagine that research tries to replace tritium with stable helium-3 in the boosters of nuclear bombs - I had suggested lithium but igniting D-Li is more difficult. Edited September 14, 2013 by Enthalpy
Enthalpy Posted September 18, 2013 Posted September 18, 2013 D-Li does not produce the proper energetic particles for a booster. D-3He is doubtful as it expels less favourable protons. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_fusion#Criteria_and_candidates_for_terrestrial_reactions http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aneutronic_fusion Produce 3He... only in faint amounts, and using much energy. p-Li looks like a candidate for a beam+target apparatus. D-D is much more easily conduced, it produces 3He and 3H that decays to 3He over decades. D is available commercially in big amounts, and D-D is readily conduced in a fusor: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fusor "just" a matter of produced amounts and consumed energy... Powerful long-term operation would also pollute through neutron activation.
Enthalpy Posted October 31, 2013 Posted October 31, 2013 3He [is] a naturally occurring nuclide, and it separates spontaneously from 4He at 2K. Just cool enough, get one layer on top of the other, how easy. The terrestrial proportion of 1.37ppm means: process 1,000 tons to get 1.37kg... So one better puts the separation plant at the helium well directly. Liquefying helium in big amounts isn't easy nor cheap. An alternative would be a molecular pump or a gaseous diffusion plant. Better, do both simultaneously: have a many-stage pump (for instance as an axial turbomolecular pump) and put a gaseous diffusion shunt around each stage, if natural leakage doesn't suffice. Each stage is more efficient at 4He while each shunt lets 3He leak better. Because the masses differ significantly, each step has an interesting yield. This can work at room temperature, with the speed attained by an optimized metallic axial pump. Cold improves. Natural helium would be introduced near the "depleted" (purer 4He) exit, so most flow absorbs little pumping power. Enriched 3He would exit at the pump's extreme inlet, after many steps that most helium does not pass. Many other methods must work. Gas chromatography can use many (many) short fibres in parallel, I suppose with oscillating pressure at the natural helium side so that 4He has no time to diffuse to the end of the fibres. I wanted to use a superconducting leaking ceramic to repel 3He as is done with O2, or a ferromagnet to alter the diffusion of 3He versus 4He, but since a nucleon is a weaker magnet than an electron, the effect is tiny at room temperature - much smaller than the contrast in diffusion speed. 3He seems 10 times better than Li to produce 3H from a neutron flux, that is at a nuclear reactor. That can explain the query for 3He.
Enthalpy Posted November 2, 2013 Posted November 2, 2013 (edited) Separating 3He from all produced natural helium would supply a bit more than the present demand, a handful of kg a year. Though, I begin to guess a different need for 3He, in much bigger quantity... Because tokamaks such as Iter need tritium to run, and must regenerate tritium to be credible, which is a very strong obstacle: sheer feasibility and pollution, as one consumed tritium makes a single neutron needed to regenerate a tritium from a 6Li, so dirty neutron multipliers must offset the losses. I tell it for years, maybe tokamak proponents get slowly forced to look into the problem. One other way would let 7Li absorb the 14MeV neutron produced by the D-T fusion. 7Li splits into 4He and T, and releases a neutron - but with energy too low to react with 6Li nor 7Li. This secondary neutron could react with 3He to make a second T. Well thought guys, but this needs 3He in big amounts, not available from terrestrial helium deposits, and of course not obtained from T decay. This can be a reason for the query at 3He artificial production. It can also be the reason why some people and agencies consider mining 3He "for nuclear fusion" where it is less scarce: on the Moon or from gas giant planets. It's not for D-3He fusion, which is hugely more difficult than the already remote D-T fusion: it's for regeneration of tritium in D-T reactors. Well, sorry folks, but isolation from normal terrestrial helium just makes a few kg a year. And despite being a space visionary, I don't really imagine affordable Selene mines. But for a few millions instead of many billions, we would have cheap electricity storage that enables wind and Solar energy on the big scale. Edited November 2, 2013 by Enthalpy
Drop Posted March 21, 2022 Posted March 21, 2022 It was shown to me use h3 and o3 to create he3 using a spining method to seperate h3 and o3 to create he3 and the shape matters of the disk for seperation hope this helps and use a high quality alunimum for the chamber. Also this will create a weightless enviornment and using the left over o will create perpulsion. -2
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