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German partners launch DioHELIOS project as part of the Fusion 2040 program

31 Oct 2024

To boost performance of high-power laser diodes, a key component of future fusion power plants.

High-power laser diodes are a key component for fusion power plants of the future. The joint project DioHELIOS sets out to boost their power and efficiency to a new level and to develop approaches for their automated mass production.

Several companies and institutes are working together in the BMBF-funded project: ams-Osram, the Ferdinand-Braun-Institut, Leibniz-Institut für Höchstfrequenztechnik (FBH), the Fraunhofer Institute for Laser Technology (ILT), Jenoptik, Laserline and Trumpf.

The proof of principle – that laser-ignited inertial confinement fusion works – has triggered a new dynamic in fusion research worldwide. This is because fusion not only decouples energy generation from the carbon cycle, meaning it does not emit any greenhouse gases, but is also based on an almost unlimited supply of fuel, is inherently safe and can supply energy at maximum reliability.

BMBF funding program Fusion 2040 launched

Germany’s Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) recognized the new dynamic early on and set up the “Fusion 2040 - Research on the Way to the Fusion Power Plant“ funding program in March 2024.

“We now need to use our home advantage. Germany already has expertise in fusion research,” said Bettina Stark-Watzinger, Federal Minister of Education and Research. “Our research institutes and supplier industry are both among the international leaders. We must consistently develop the results of domestic basic research.”

The research is now picking up speed thanks to the joint project DioHELIOS within the “Fusion 2040” funding program. It brings together a broad consortium from the photonics industry and research to advance a key component for fusion power plants of the future: high-power diode lasers.

These are needed as pump sources for the high-energy lasers that compress plasma from hydrogen isotopes at a pressure of around 300 gigabars to an extreme extent, and ignite it at temperatures of around 150 million deg C.

In the Californian test facility, this task is assigned to the world’s largest and highest-energy laser. In an area the size of three football fields, 192 beam paths generate over two megajoules of energy per pulse. Peak power is almost 500 terawatts. The system operates in the ultraviolet wavelength range at 351 nm with pulse durations of around 10 ns.

Key components for fusion power plants

Planned in the 1990s with the state-of-the-art technology available at the time, the test facility was not designed for efficient energy generation, but for basic fusion and plasma research. The plant design is unsuitable for commercial power plants because the laser needs several hours to cool down after each shot.

In a power plant, on the other hand, repetition rates of 10 to 20 ignitions per second are required. The efficiency of the entire laser system must also be immensely increased, which, according to the current state of the art, can only be achieved with laser diodes specifically tuned to the absorption lines of the amplifier medium instead of broadband emitting flash lamps.

Today’s diode laser pump modules do not meet the requirements of commercial power plants. The demand for diode laser bars – the semiconductor-based basic components of the pump modules - for a single power plant already exceeds their current global annual production.

Breaking new ground

For this reason, the DioHELIOS project (Diode Laser Pump Sources for High-Energy Lasers in Fusion Power Plants) must break new ground in the development of pump modules, which are essential to make laser-based fusion power plants possible. In general, the laser pulses for fusion are generated with energies in the nano-joule range from a pulsed fiber laser. As they pass through several amplifier stages, their energy level is gradually ramped up into the double-digit joule range.

To pump them into the kilojoule range, the laser pulses repeatedly pass through 20 to 40 cm large, specially doped glass or crystal plates, where the spatially, temporally and spectrally precise energy provided by the diode laser modules amplifies them. The pulses pass through this in parallel in 200 to 400 beam paths before they reach the fusion chamber, where ignite the target.

This amplification needs customized pump modules developed specifically for the requirements of inertial confinement fusion. Not only must their pulse energy increase by a factor of 50 compared to today’s technology, but efficiency must also be improved at the same time.

The six DioHELIOS consortium partners – two research institutes and four industrial companies – will focus their research on these objectives. A seventh partner is associated with the laser fusion start-up Focused Energy from Darmstadt. Jenoptik, ams-Osram and the Ferdinand-Braun-Institut (FBH) will contribute their expertise as leading manufacturers and developers of laser diodes and drive forward new approaches for semiconductor lasers.

Need for stability

Fraunhofer ILT will support them by designing and optimizing the diode laser bars with its specially developed SEMSIS software. The aim is to significantly increase the output power of the chips while ensuring they can be manufactured industrially at the required cost level and resource efficiency.

In the case of diode lasers for fusion power plants, the spectral distribution of the laser beam needs to be as stable as possible. The consortium is pursuing new design approaches for this as well as for increased light yield by using so-called multi-junction concepts: they aim to significantly increase the yield in the electro-optical conversion of electrons into photons by stacking several active regions.

The optimized diode laser chips are then sent to Trumpf, Laserline and Jenoptik, who will use them to build diode laser stacks (several bars stacked on top of each other) with a high packing density and consequently high irradiance. Highly effective cooling is particularly important to ensure long lifetime and avoid temperature-induced spectral drifts.

Beam shaping and beam guidance are also on the agenda. Fraunhofer ILT is developing specially optimized optics suitable for automated assembly to collimate and homogenize the beam profile. In all of this, the partners will have to look at how scalable the modules are to higher outputs and pulse energies as well as at systematic cost control.

Berkeley Nucleonics CorporationSynopsys, Optical Solutions GroupABTechAlluxaUniverse Kogaku America Inc.HÜBNER PhotonicsHyperion Optics
© 2024 SPIE Europe
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