Nuclear fusion could be the clean energy of the future — but these 'tough' challenges stand in the way

Even once researchers can reliably get more power out of a fusion reaction than they put in, they'll still need to overcome engineering challenges to scale up fusion energy.

A photo of an engineer working in the target chamber of the National Ignition Facility
Inside the target chamber at the National Ignition Facility, where researchers work on getting higher energy outputs from fusion power.
(Image credit: Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Lawrence Livermore National Security, LLC, and the Department of Energy: National Ignition Facility, Public Domain.)

The way scientists think about fusion changed forever in 2022, when what some called the experiment of the century demonstrated for the first time that fusion can be a viable source of clean energy.

The experiment, at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, showed ignition: a fusion reaction generating more energy out than was put in.

George R. Tynan
Professor of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, University of California, San Diego

George R. Tynan received his Ph.D. in 1991 from the Department of Mechanical, Aerospace, and Nuclear Engineering at the University of California, Los Angeles. He then spent several years studying the effect of sheared flows on plasma turbulence on experiments located in the Federal Republic of Germany and at Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory. He then worked in industry developing plasma sources for use in investigating the creation of nano-meter scale semiconductor circuits, and joined the UCSD faculty in 1999. He has published extensively on turbulent transport in magnetically confined fusion plasmas, plasma-material interactions, and basic plasma physics.