Yes, because I'd consider that self-sustaining(!)... Press button, boom. And then? And making use of the energy? Even though it obviously makes more energy than was used to initiate it, sorry, I'd rather discounted that. Apologies if I hadn't made that obvious.
So you're dismissing it because the use of the fusion power is used for destruction ? Then I guess atomic bombs don't use fission power, but most probably magic.
Also, don't forget that one-hit reaction, when repeated, can form things like gasoline engine.
No, I'm dismissing it because it's not self-sustaining in any way consistent with power-generation. Which I
believe was what was being discussed. (Not even easily harvested for power on an more occasional basis.)
Inertial Fusion Plants are far from being realised. As far as I can tell, the stage of realisation that they've reached is
identical to that of non-inertial versions of fusion power... Getting the fusion 'fuel' to be fused in the first place. The rest of the process (abstracting useful work/energy from the fusion and cycling the process in a repeatable manner) is still a pipe-dream.
(Personally, I'd wonder if something more akin to a turbine method would be better than a "reciprocating engine". Continuous flow of fusion materials into a 'hotspot', this energy being used to sustain the flow in (against the pressure of 'combustion', of course) while the end-products get exhausted out the other way. Perhaps with a 2
2H method, the
2H+
3H and
3He+n products could be processed in an 'afterburner' unit, or two... But that's at least as speculative... As is such a unit being, at least partially vented, directly providing reaction thrust, and a much smoother and easier-throttled version than that of either of projects Orion and Daedalus)
JT-60 in 1996 reached the break-even.
"During dueterium plasma experiments in 1998 plasma conditions would, if the D-D fuel were replaced with a 1:1 mix of deuterium and tritium), have exceeded break-even..." "...does not have the facilities to handle tritium..." ",,achieved conditions which in D-T
would have provided Q = 1.25..." "A self sustaining nuclear fusion reaction would need a value of Q that is greater than 5"... Courtesy of Wikipedia. Selective quoting, for the sake of brevity. My emphasis on the "would have" bit. It
would have been better than break-even, for fuels it can't handle. And, even then, this is less than the self-sustaining value. (Not sure why Q>5 is needed, exactly, but
perhaps that can be shaved closer to 1.25 with a better design...)
Finally, neutrons are not radioactive.
I never said they were. I said that they can convert other materials to radioactive ones, as you also acknowledge. They're radi
ative, however, and damned difficult to corral. Not completely a problem if you can put your reactor far from the people it's supplying energy to (or Propulsion... c.f. 'Discovery One' in 2001:aSO, although those were apparently fission engines), or behind a sufficient amount of dead-weight mass, but this still has to be considered.
In fact, neutrons don't seem to be a concern at all for the ITER, because it is even planned to use lead, which when receive a neutron, will release 2, to increase the likeliness of lithium-neutron reaction.
I don't find that unconcerning at all... Getting two neutrons for the original one (presumably converting lead to thallium in the process) seems a little like increasing the issue.
Of
course, the daughter neutrons will probably be randomly flying around (as many back towards the core as were originally flying away from it, and a significant amount diagonally through the shielding, with increased chances of further capture and conversion) and probably with less energy, but I'd need to dig out my old text-books (probably some mathematics ones, as well as those relating to the physics of the issue) before I could
fully reassure myself about the wisdom of this idea... The guys who have suggested it have probably satisfied themselves, sufficiently, but the devil is in the details that you omit...