Your One-Stop Shop for Premium Quality and Unmatched Savings – MakMaxPro Delivers!

Princeton’s 3D-Printed Fusion Reactor: A Path To Clean Energy

The Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL) has developed a small, experimental nuclear fusion reactor, constructed largely with 3D-printed and off-the-shelf parts. This compact reactor—roughly the size of a kitchen table—uses a glass tube surrounded by 3D-printed nylon and nearly 10,000 rare-earth magnets to contain superheated plasma, the basis for generating fusion energy, much like the process powering stars.

This innovative design represents a significant reduction in cost and time compared to traditional fusion reactors; while similar reactors in Germany required two decades and $1.1 billion to construct, Princeton’s model was built within a year for only $640,000. The PPPL reactor is based on a “stellarator” design, using magnetic fields to stabilize plasma, and aims to release large amounts of clean energy by fusing atomic nuclei without the toxic waste produced by traditional fission reactors.

A model of the planar coil stellarator, initially developed at PPPL. (Image via PPPL Facebook).

Nuclear fusion, while not yet commercially viable, is attracting attention as the tech industry seeks sustainable power solutions to support energy-intensive AI technologies. Big tech companies like Microsoft, Amazon, and Google are already exploring nuclear energy alternatives to power data centers, though most investments so far rely on fission, which still generates radioactive waste. Fusion, by contrast, has the potential to produce vast, nearly limitless energy without this waste, promising a safer, cleaner alternative.

To bring fusion closer to practical use, the U.S. government has partnered with Type One Energy, a company specializing in stellarator fusion reactors, to build a fusion pilot plant in Tennessee. Expected to be operational by 2029, this plant will focus on validating fusion technology at scale rather than immediate energy production. Although commercial fusion remains distant, Princeton’s low-cost, 3D-printed fusion reactor symbolizes a promising step toward a zero-carbon, high-energy future.

Filed in Green. Read more about , and .

Trending Products

0
Add to compare
- 20%
LG UltraGear QHD 27-Inch Gaming Monitor 27GL83A-B – IPS 1ms (GtG), with HDR 10 Compatibility, NVIDIA G-SYNC, and AMD FreeSync, 144Hz, Black

LG UltraGear QHD 27-Inch Gaming Monitor 27GL83A-B – IPS 1ms (GtG), with HDR 10 Compatibility, NVIDIA G-SYNC, and AMD FreeSync, 144Hz, Black

Original price was: $299.99.Current price is: $240.20.
0
Add to compare
- 31%
Acer Nitro 27″ WQHD 2560 x 1440 PC Gaming IPS Monitor | AMD FreeSync Premium Up to 180Hz Refresh 0.5ms DCI-P3 95% 1 Display Port 1.2 & 2 HDMI 2.0 XV271U M3bmiiprx,Black

Acer Nitro 27″ WQHD 2560 x 1440 PC Gaming IPS Monitor | AMD FreeSync Premium Up to 180Hz Refresh 0.5ms DCI-P3 95% 1 Display Port 1.2 & 2 HDMI 2.0 XV271U M3bmiiprx,Black

Original price was: $289.99.Current price is: $199.99.
0
Add to compare
- 16%
Lenovo 15.6″ FHD Laptop, Intel Pentium N6000 Quad-core Processor, 16GB Memory, 1TB SSD Storage, Ethernet Port, HDMI, USB-C, WiFi & Bluetooth, Windows 11 Home, WOWPC USB Bundle

Lenovo 15.6″ FHD Laptop, Intel Pentium N6000 Quad-core Processor, 16GB Memory, 1TB SSD Storage, Ethernet Port, HDMI, USB-C, WiFi & Bluetooth, Windows 11 Home, WOWPC USB Bundle

Original price was: $429.00.Current price is: $360.99.
.

We will be happy to hear your thoughts

Leave a reply

MakMaxPro
Logo
Register New Account
Compare items
  • Total (0)
Compare
0
Shopping cart