Nuclear fusion reactor
The fusion reactor uses an electron orbiter to induce continuous nuclear fusion with controlled electron energy, addressing the size and efficiency challenges of conventional reactors, achieving compact and efficient energy generation.
Patent Information
- Authority / Receiving Office
- WO · WO
- Patent Type
- Applications
- Current Assignee / Owner
- MIRRORCLE ANALYSIS CENTER LTD
- Filing Date
- 2024-12-20
- Publication Date
- 2026-06-25
AI Technical Summary
Conventional nuclear fusion reactors, whether magnetic confinement or laser-based, face challenges such as the need for large equipment, precise synchronization, short fusion times, and have not yet achieved practical application, with plasma densities far below the required 10⁻¹⁸ pieces/m³.
A fusion reactor utilizing an electron orbiter, such as a synchrotron or electron storage ring, where electrons orbit and collide with fusion fuel particles to ionize and trap them, inducing continuous nuclear fusion through D-D, D-T, or p-B reactions, with controlled electron energy between 6 MeV and 100 MeV, and a compact design.
Enables continuous nuclear fusion in a smaller reactor than conventional ones, capable of generating significant energy output, including a clean fusion option via p-B reactions without neutrons, and efficient energy transfer to steam for power generation.
Smart Images

Figure JP2024045215_25062026_PF_FP_ABST