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Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL) is a
United States Department of Energy The United States Department of Energy (DOE) is an executive department of the U.S. federal government that oversees U.S. national energy policy and energy production, the research and development of nuclear power, the military's nuclear w ...
national laboratory for plasma physics and
nuclear fusion Nuclear fusion is a nuclear reaction, reaction in which two or more atomic nuclei combine to form a larger nuclei, nuclei/neutrons, neutron by-products. The difference in mass between the reactants and products is manifested as either the rele ...
science. Its primary mission is research into and development of fusion as an energy source. It is known for the development of the
stellarator A stellarator confines Plasma (physics), plasma using external magnets. Scientists aim to use stellarators to generate fusion power. It is one of many types of magnetic confinement fusion devices. The name "stellarator" refers to stars because ...
and
tokamak A tokamak (; ) is a device which uses a powerful magnetic field generated by external magnets to confine plasma (physics), plasma in the shape of an axially symmetrical torus. The tokamak is one of several types of magnetic confinement fusi ...
designs, along with numerous fundamental advances in plasma physics and the exploration of many other plasma confinement concepts. PPPL grew out of the top-secret
Cold War The Cold War was a period of global Geopolitics, geopolitical rivalry between the United States (US) and the Soviet Union (USSR) and their respective allies, the capitalist Western Bloc and communist Eastern Bloc, which lasted from 1947 unt ...
project to control thermonuclear reactions, called Project Matterhorn. The focus of this program changed from H-bombs to fusion power in 1951, when Lyman Spitzer developed the stellarator concept and was granted funding from the Atomic Energy Commission to study the concept. This led to a series of machines in the 1950s and 1960s. In 1961, after declassification, Project Matterhorn was renamed the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory. PPPL's stellarators proved unable to meet their performance goals. In 1968, Soviet's claims of excellent performance on their tokamaks generated intense scepticism, and to test it, PPPL's
Model C stellarator The Model C stellarator was the first large-scale stellarator to be built, during the early stages of fusion power research. Planned since 1952, construction began in 1961 at what is today the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL). The Mo ...
was converted to a tokamak. It verified the Soviet claims, and since that time, PPPL has been a worldwide leader in tokamak theory and design, building a series of record-breaking machines including the Princeton Large Torus, TFTR and many others. Dozens of smaller machines were also built to test particular problems and solutions, including the ATC, NSTX, and LTX. PPPL is operated by
Princeton University Princeton University is a private university, private Ivy League research university in Princeton, New Jersey, United States. Founded in 1746 in Elizabeth, New Jersey, Elizabeth as the College of New Jersey, Princeton is the List of Colonial ...
on the Forrestal Campus in Plainsboro Township, New Jersey.


History


Formation

In 1950, John Wheeler was setting up a secret H-bomb research lab at
Princeton University Princeton University is a private university, private Ivy League research university in Princeton, New Jersey, United States. Founded in 1746 in Elizabeth, New Jersey, Elizabeth as the College of New Jersey, Princeton is the List of Colonial ...
. Lyman Spitzer, Jr., an avid mountaineer, was aware of this program and suggested the name "Project Matterhorn". Spitzer, a professor of astronomy, had for many years been involved in the study of very hot rarefied gases in interstellar space. While leaving for a ski trip to
Aspen Aspen is a common name for certain tree species in the Populus sect. Populus, of the ''Populus'' (poplar) genus. Species These species are called aspens: * ''Populus adenopoda'' – Chinese aspen (China, south of ''P. tremula'') * ''Populus da ...
in February 1951, his father called and told him to read the front page of the ''
New York Times ''The New York Times'' (''NYT'') is an American daily newspaper based in New York City. ''The New York Times'' covers domestic, national, and international news, and publishes opinion pieces, investigative reports, and reviews. As one of ...
''. The paper had a story about claims released the day before in
Argentina Argentina, officially the Argentine Republic, is a country in the southern half of South America. It covers an area of , making it the List of South American countries by area, second-largest country in South America after Brazil, the fourt ...
that a relatively unknown German scientist named Ronald Richter had achieved nuclear fusion in his Huemul Project. Spitzer ultimately dismissed these claims, and they were later proven erroneous, but the story got him thinking about fusion. While riding the
chairlift An elevated passenger ropeway, or chairlift, is a type of aerial lift, which consists of a continuously circulating steel wire rope loop strung between two end terminals and usually over intermediate towers. They are the primary on-hill tran ...
at Aspen, he struck upon a new concept to confine a plasma for long periods so it could be heated to fusion temperatures. He called this concept the
stellarator A stellarator confines Plasma (physics), plasma using external magnets. Scientists aim to use stellarators to generate fusion power. It is one of many types of magnetic confinement fusion devices. The name "stellarator" refers to stars because ...
. Later that year he took this design to the Atomic Energy Commission in Washington. As a result of this meeting and a review of the invention by scientists throughout the nation, the stellarator proposal was funded in 1951. As the device would produce high-energy
neutron The neutron is a subatomic particle, symbol or , that has no electric charge, and a mass slightly greater than that of a proton. The Discovery of the neutron, neutron was discovered by James Chadwick in 1932, leading to the discovery of nucle ...
s, which could be used for breeding weapon fuel, the program was classified and carried out as part of Project Matterhorn. Matterhorn ultimately ended its involvement in the bomb field in 1954, becoming entirely devoted to the fusion power field. In 1958, this magnetic fusion research was declassified following the United Nations International Conference on the Peaceful Uses of Atomic Energy. This generated an influx of graduate students eager to learn the "new" physics, which in turn influenced the lab to concentrate more on basic research. The early figure-8 stellarators included: Model-A, Model-B, Model-B2, Model-B3. Model-B64 was a square with round corners, and Model-B65 had a racetrack configuration. The last and most powerful stellarator at this time was the "racetrack" Model C (operating from 1961 to 1969).


Tokamak

By the mid-1960s it was clear something was fundamentally wrong with the stellarators, as they leaked fuel at rates far beyond what theory predicted, rates that carried away energy from the plasma that was far beyond what the fusion reactions could ever produce. Spitzer became extremely skeptical that fusion energy was possible and expressed this opinion in very public fashion in 1965 at an international meeting in the UK. At the same meeting, the Soviet delegation announced results about 10 times better than any previous device, which Spitzer dismissed as a measurement error. At the next meeting in 1968, the Soviets presented considerable data from their devices that showed even greater performance, about 100 times the Bohm diffusion limit. An enormous argument broke out between the AEC and the various labs about whether this was real. When a UK team verified the results in 1969, the AEC suggested PPPL to convert their Model C to a tokamak to test it, as the only lab willing to build one from scratch, Oak Ridge, would need some time to build theirs. Seeing the possibility of being bypassed in the fusion field, PPPL eventually agreed to convert the Model C to what became the Symmetric Tokamak (ST), quickly verifying the approach. Two small machines followed the ST, exploring ways to heat the plasma, and then the Princeton Large Torus (PLT) to test whether the theory that larger machines would be more stable was true. Starting in 1975, PLT verified these "scaling laws" and then went on to add neutral beam injection from Oak Ridge that resulted in a series of record-setting plasma temperatures, eventually topping out at 78 million kelvins, well beyond what was needed for a practical fusion power system. Its success was major news. With this string of successes, PPPL had little trouble winning the bid to build an even larger machine, one specifically designed to reach "breakeven" while running on an actual fusion fuel, rather than a test gas. This produced the Tokamak Fusion Test Reactor, or TFTR, which was completed in 1982. After a lengthy breaking-in period, TFTR began slowly increasing the temperature and density of the fuel, while introducing deuterium gas as the fuel. In April 1986, it demonstrated a combination of density and confinement, the so-called fusion triple product, well beyond what was needed for a practical reactor. In July, it reached a temperature of 200 million kelvins, far beyond what was needed. However, when the system was operated with both of these conditions at the same time, a high enough triple product and temperature, the system became unstable. Three years of effort failed to address these issues, and TFTR never reached its goal. The system continued performing basic studies on these problems until being shut down in 1997.Staff (1996) "Fusion Lab Planning Big Reactor's Last Run", '' The Record'', 22 December 1996, p. N-07. Beginning in 1993, TFTR was the first in the world to use 1:1 mixtures of deuteriumtritium. In 1994 it yielded an unprecedented 10.7 megawatts of fusion power.


Later designs

In 1999, the National Spherical Torus Experiment (NSTX), based on the spherical tokamak concept, came online at the PPPL. Odd-parity heating was demonstrated in the 4 cm radius PFRC-1 experiment in 2006. PFRC-2 has a plasma radius of 8 cm. Studies of electron heating in PFRC-2 reached 500  eV with pulse lengths of 300 ms. In 2015, PPPL completed an upgrade to NSTX to produce NSTX-U that made it the most powerful experimental fusion facility, or tokamak, of its type in the world. In 2017, the group received a Phase II NIAC grant along with two NASA STTRs funding the RF subsystem and superconducting coil subsystem. In 2024, the lab announced MUSE, a new
stellarator A stellarator confines Plasma (physics), plasma using external magnets. Scientists aim to use stellarators to generate fusion power. It is one of many types of magnetic confinement fusion devices. The name "stellarator" refers to stars because ...
. MUSE uses rare-earth permanent magnets with a field strength that can exceed 1.2 teslas. The device uses quasiaxisymmetry, a subtype of quasisymmetry. The research team claimed that its use of quasisymmetry was more sophisticated than prior devices. Also in 2024, PPL announced a
reinforcement learning Reinforcement learning (RL) is an interdisciplinary area of machine learning and optimal control concerned with how an intelligent agent should take actions in a dynamic environment in order to maximize a reward signal. Reinforcement learnin ...
model that could forecast tearing mode instabilities up to 300 milliseconds in advance. That is enough time for the plasma controller to adjust operating parameters to prevent the tear and maintain H-mode performance.


Directors

The following persons served as the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory director: Table notes:


Timeline of major research projects and experiments

DateFormat = yyyy ImageSize = width:1000 height:auto barincrement:25 PlotArea = left:125 right:65 bottom:70 top:15 Colors = id:canvas value:rgb(0.97,0.97,0.97) id:grid1 value:rgb(0.80,0.80,0.80) id:grid2 value:rgb(0.86,0.86,0.86) id:dir value:rgb(0.86,0.86,0.26) id:dir2 value:rgb(0.96,0.96,0.26) id:lightblue value:rgb(0.60,0.99,0.99) id:sphe value:rgb(0.80,0.80,0.99) legend: Spherator id:sphtok value:rgb(0.58,0.90,0.98) legend: Spherical_Tokamak id:stella value:rgb(0.95,0.70,0.70) legend: Stellarator id:tok value:rgb(0.38,0.70,0.88) legend: Tokamak id:other value:rgb(0.38,0.88,0.38) legend: Other Period = from:1950 till:2020 TimeAxis = orientation:horizontal format:yyyy ScaleMajor = unit:year increment:5 start:1950 gridcolor:grid1 ScaleMinor = unit:year increment:1 start:2020 gridcolor:grid2 AlignBars = justify Legend = position:bottom BackgroundColors = canvas:canvas bars:canvas BarData= bar:dir text: Directors barset:fusion bar:fusion1 text: Fusion program bar:fusion2 bar:fusion3 text: Other_fusion_related bar:fusion4 bar:fusion5 bar:fusion6 barset:other PlotData= width:25 fontsize:9 textcolor:black anchor:from align:left color:dir shift:(0,-4) bar:dir from:1951 till:1961 text: " Spitzer" from:1961 till:1980 color: dir2 text: " Gottlieb" from:1981 till:1990 text: " Fürth" from:1991 till:1996 color: dir2 text: " Davidson" from:1997 till:2008 text: " Goldston" from:2008 till:2016 color: dir2 text: "Prager" from:2018 till:end text: " Cowley" width:25 fontsize:10 textcolor:black anchor:from align:left color:tok bar:fusion1 from:1953 till:1962 shift:(0,-4) color:stella text: "Model A/B stellarators" bar:fusion2 from:1962 till:1969 shift:(0,-4) color:stella text: "
Model C stellarator The Model C stellarator was the first large-scale stellarator to be built, during the early stages of fusion power research. Planned since 1952, construction began in 1961 at what is today the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL). The Mo ...
" bar:fusion1 from:1970 till:1974 shift:(0,-4) color:tok text: "Symmetric Tokamak" bar:fusion2 from:1975 till:1986 shift:(0,-4) color:tok text: " Princeton Large Torus" bar:fusion1 from:1982 till:1997 shift:(0,-4) color:tok text: " Tokamak Fusion Test Reactor" bar:fusion1 from:1999 till:end shift:(0,-4) color:sphtok text: " National Spherical Torus Experiment" width:25 fontsize:10 textcolor:black anchor:from align:left color:other barset:other bar:fusion3 from:1971 till:1976 shift:(0,-4) color:sphe text: "Floating Multipole-1" bar:fusion4 from:1972 till:1976 shift:(0,-4) color:tok text: "Adiabatic Toroidal Compressor" bar:fusion5 from:1978 till:1983 shift:(0,-4) text: "Poloidal Divertor Experiment" bar:fusion6 from:1984 till:1992 shift:(0,-4) text: "Princeton Beta Experiment" bar:fusion3 from:2005 till:2008 shift:(0,-4) color:sphtok text: "Current Drive Experiment" bar:fusion4 from:2008 till:end shift:(0,-4) color:sphtok text: " Lithium Tokamak Experiment" bar:fusion5 from:1995 till:end shift:(0,-4) text: "Magnetic Reconnection Experiment" bar:fusion6 from:1999 till:end shift:(0,-4) text: "Hall Thruster Experiment" from:2008 till:end shift:(0,-4) text: " Field Reversed Configuration"


Other domestic and international research activities

Laboratory scientists are collaborating with researchers on fusion science and technology at other facilities, including DIII-D in San Diego,
EAST East is one of the four cardinal directions or points of the compass. It is the opposite direction from west and is the direction from which the Sun rises on the Earth. Etymology As in other languages, the word is formed from the fact that ea ...
in China, JET in the United Kingdom, KSTAR in South Korea, the LHD in Japan, the Wendelstein 7-X (W7-X) device in Germany, and the International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor (ITER) in France. PPPL manages the U.S. ITER project activities together with
Oak Ridge National Laboratory Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) is a federally funded research and development centers, federally funded research and development center in Oak Ridge, Tennessee, United States. Founded in 1943, the laboratory is sponsored by the United Sta ...
and Savannah River National Laboratory. The lab delivered 75% of components for the fusion energy experiment's electrical network in 2017 and has been leading the design and construction of six diagnostic tools for analyzing ITER plasmas. The PPPL physicist Richard Hawryluk served as ITER Deputy Director-General from 2011 to 2013. In 2022, PPPL staff developed with researchers from other national labs and universities over several months a US ITER research plan during the joint Fusion Energy Sciences Research Needs Workshop. Staff are applying knowledge gained in fusion research to a number of theoretical and experimental areas including
materials science Materials science is an interdisciplinary field of researching and discovering materials. Materials engineering is an engineering field of finding uses for materials in other fields and industries. The intellectual origins of materials sci ...
, solar physics,
chemistry Chemistry is the scientific study of the properties and behavior of matter. It is a physical science within the natural sciences that studies the chemical elements that make up matter and chemical compound, compounds made of atoms, molecules a ...
, and
manufacturing Manufacturing is the creation or production of goods with the help of equipment, labor, machines, tools, and chemical or biological processing or formulation. It is the essence of the secondary sector of the economy. The term may refer ...
. PPPL also aims to speed the development of fusion energy through the development of an increased number of public-private partnerships.


Plasma science and technology

* Beam Dynamics and Nonneutral Plasma * Laboratory for Plasma Nanosynthesis (LPN)"Laboratory for Plasma Nanosynthesis (LPN)"
Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory, accessed 16 May 2018.


Theoretical plasma physics

* DOE Scientific Simulation Initiative * U.S. MHD Working Group * Field Reversed Configuration (FRC) Theory Consortium * Tokamak Physics Design and Analysis Codes * TRANSP Code * National Transport Code Collaboration (NTCC) Modules Library


Transportation

Tiger Transit's Route 3 runs to Forrestal Campus and terminates at PPPL.


See also

* Project Sherwood * National Compact Stellarator Experiment (NCSX)


References


External links

*
Project Matterhorn Publications and Reports, 1951–1958
Princeton University Library Digital Collections * {{Authority control Plainsboro Township, New Jersey Princeton University United States Department of Energy national laboratories Federally Funded Research and Development Centers 1961 establishments in New Jersey Research institutes in New Jersey