Scientists at the University of Missouri have devised a new way to create and control plasma that could transform American energy generation and storage.
Randy Curry, professor of electrical and computer engineering at the University of Missouri’s College of Engineering,
and his team developed a device that launches a ring of plasma at
distances of up to two feet. Although the plasma reaches a temperature
hotter than the surface of the sun, it doesn’t emit radiation and is
completely safe in proximity to humans.
While most of us are familiar with three states of matter – liquid,
gas and solid – there is also a fourth state known as plasma, which
includes things such as fire and lightning. Life on Earth depends on the
energy emitted by plasma produced during fusion reactions within the
sun.
The secret to Curry’s success was developing a way to make plasma
form its own self-magnetic field, which holds it together as it travels
through the air.
“Launching plasma in open air is the ‘Holy Grail’ in the field of physics,” said Curry.
“Creating plasma in a vacuum tube surrounded by powerful
electromagnets is no big deal; dozens of labs can do that. Our
innovation allows the plasma to hold itself together while it travels
through regular air without any need for containment.”
The plasma device could also be enlarged to handle much larger amounts of energy, he said.
For the current work, Curry and his team used older technologies to
build their prototype of a plasma-generating machine. But a considerably
smaller device using newer, miniaturized parts could also be built
within three to five years with sufficient funding, Curry said.
“We have a world-class team at MU’s Center for Physical & Power Electronics, but that team will evaporate without funding.”
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