universe
Communication
With Nanoplasmonics towards Fusion
Tamás Sándor Biró 1,2,3, *,† , Norbert Kroó 1 , László Pál Csernai 1,4,5 , Miklós Veres 1 , Márk Aladi 1 , István Papp 1 ,
Miklós Ákos Kedves 1 , Judit Kámán 1 , Ágnes Nagyné Szokol 1 , Roman Holomb 1 , István Rigó 1 , Attila Bonyár 6 ,
Alexandra Borók 1,6 , Shireen Zangana 6 , Rebeka Kovács 6 , Nóra Tarpataki 6 , Mária Csete 7 , András Szenes 7 ,
Dávid Vass 7 , Emese Tóth 7 , Gábor Galbács 8 and Melinda Szalóki 9
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
*
†
Wigner Research Centre for Physics, 1121 Budapest, Hungary
Institute for Physics, Babeş Bolyai University, 3400 Cluj-Napoca, Romania
Complexity Science Hub, 1080 Vienna, Austria
Department of Physics and Technology, Bergen University, 5020 Bergen, Norway
Csernai Consult, 5119 Bergen, Norway
Department of Electronics Technology, Faculty of Electrical Engineering and Informatics,
Budapest University of Technology and Economics, 1111 Budapest, Hungary
Department for Quantum Optics, University of Szeged, 6720 Szeged, Hungary
Department of Inorganic and Analytical Chemistry, University of Szeged, 6720 Szeged, Hungary
Department of Biomaterials and Prosthetic Dentistry, Faculty of Dentistry, University of Debrecen,
4032 Debrecen, Hungary
Correspondence: biro.tamas@wigner.hu
Based on a talk given by T.S.Biró at the Zimanyi School, 5–9 December 2022.
Abstract: A status report is presented about the Nanoplasmonic Laser Induced Fusion Experiment
(NAPLIFE). The goal is to investigate and verify plasmonically enhanced phenomena on the surfaces
of nanoantennas embedded in a polymer target at laser intensities up to a few times 1016 W/cm2
and pulse durations of 40–120 fs. The first results on enhanced crater formation for Au-doped
polymer targets are shown, and SERS signals typical for CD2 and ND bound vibrations are cited.
Trials to detect D/H ratio by means of LIBS measurments are reported.
Plasmonics has the
potential to work at these intensities, enhancing the energy and deuterium production, due to thus
far unknown mechanisms.
Citation: Biró, T.S.; Kroó, N.; Csernai,
Keywords: fusion; plasmonics; nanotechnology; energy production
L.P.; Veres, M.; Aladi, M.; Papp, I.;
Kedves, M.A.; Kámán, J.; Nagyné
Szokol, A.; Holomb, R.; et al. With
Nanoplasmonics towards Fusion.
Universe 2023, 9, 233. https://
doi.org/10.3390/universe9050233
Academic Editor: Máté Csanád
Received: 29 March 2023
Revised: 28 April 2023
Accepted: 15 May 2023
Published: 17 May 2023
Copyright: © 2023 by the authors.
Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.
This article is an open access article
distributed under the terms and
conditions of the Creative Commons
Attribution (CC BY) license (https://
creativecommons.org/licenses/by/
4.0/).
1. Laser Fusion Ignition Improvement by Nanoantennas
Taming nuclear fusion is a long-term dream [1]. Since the 1950s, several approaches
have been developed towards this goal. To date, the most characteristic experiments
belong to two groups of approaches: (i) magnetic confinement fusion (MCF) techniques
and (ii) laser inertial heating and compression (ICF). The former approach has developed
different techniques for producing the magnetic field which confines the hot plasma, such as
tokamak and stellarator, while the latter uses more and more powerful lasers to increase the
compression and to reach the ignition temperature necessary for starting elementary fusion
reactions in thermal equilibrium. ITER in Cadarash, France is building the largest tokamak
ever seen, and NIF in Los Alamos, Nevada collects the energy of 192 huge lasers onto a
miniscule target (hohlraum). In both cases, magnetic confinement or inertial compressed
fusion, there are plasma instabilities to fight.
The third type of approach, which generally do not aim for thermal equilibrium, have
been discredited over the years by the “cold” fusion fallacy which presented high claims but
provided no evidence. Yet, some fusion as a by-product of mechanical manipulations, such
as sonoluminescence or cracking of metals enriched with hydrogen, have been reported
in the passing decades. Generally, the chemical type of spectral or other evidence hunted
down the presence of deuterium (atoms, not nuclei) in such cases. The real goal is to reach
Universe 2023, 9, 233. https://doi.org/10.3390/universe9050233
https://www.mdpi.com/journal/universe
Universe 2023, 9, 233
2 of 7
tamed fusion, even as nanofusion in a controllable quantity is preferred for slow but rich
energy production.
Nanoplasmonics is one of the efficient means of squeezing electromagnetic energy
into nanosized volumes. It may result in hotspots around nanoparticles with high electron
density, and thus high electromagnetic fields with characteristic lifetimes in the few times
ten femtosecond range. The near field of these localized plasmons has a screening effect
around positively charged particles (e.g., protons) and the momentum of the correlated
motion of the plasmonic electrons may be transferred to these positively charged particles,
resulting in their acceleration to high momentum and energy. These positive effects may
play significant role in increasing the probability of fusion of these positive (e.g., proton,
deuterium, boron, etc.) ions.
Our Nanoplasmonic Laser-Induced Fusion Experiment (NAPLIFE) investigates the
extent to which nanotechnology may improve the laser beam targets in order to come
closer to fusion ignition conditions at a lower input energy than is provided by the direct
methods applied in big facilities. In this way, we hope to assist with the effects from
plasmonics, from the collective motion of electrons illuminated by intense and ultrashort,
well-contrasted laser pulses. After the first few years of this project, carried out with modest
means, we report our initial experiences of the enhancement of laser energy absorption due
to nanoplasmonic effects, stemming from doping metal (Au) nanoantennas in a transparent
polymer target [2–7].
We prepare 20–160 micrometer-thick targets made of UDMA-TEGDMA copolymer, a
material used in dentistry as tooth filler [2]. Our choice was motivated by the fact that while
nanometals are easy to mix under a fluid, for laser shootings and transportation, a solid
carrier is advantageous. The UDMA-TEGDMA can be solidified using UV light treatment
after mixing. Au nanorods have been implemented into the polymer with carefully chosen
size resonant to the laser wavelength of 795 nm. Furthermore, after finding the first signals
for the presence of deuterium in the target remainder in molecular vibration spectra after
shooting at it, for comparison and background measurements, we also use deuterized
targets. This is achieved by admixing another, shorter molecule, the MMA, where all eight
H atoms can be replaced by D atoms. In this way, up to 31 per cent D/H ratio can be
achieved in the total copolymer molecule of the target. The width of the target is larger
(160 µm), permitting us to study the crater sizes remaining after single shots, while it shall
be smaller when planning multilayer targets in successive experiments.
The theory behind hoping for an enhancement of energy density due to plasmonics
requires extended computer simulations on the motion of electrons on the Au nanoantennas of resonant size and various shapes. Although in the experiment, we are using
cylindrical shapes, other shapes and metals sometimes promise a higher value of near
field enhancement [8]. Theoretically, near-field enhancement (NFE) factors in the order of
100 can be reached, meaning an energy density enhancement of 104 in near atomic layers,
up to cca. 10–30 nm-s.
The classical approach to studying plasmonic effects on nanoparticles involves the
use of the dielectric function of the free electron gas, which often neglects important
phenomena such as electron–electron interactions and spill-out effects; these are typically
included by fit parameters. However, alongside such classical methods, we also use kinetic
models utilizing the particle-in-cell (PIC) method. In PIC simulations, marker particles are
randomly distributed on the metal surface based on the electron number density, and these
particles move in a continuous phase space, while densities and currents are computed in
stationary mesh cells.
The PIC method has been shown to be an efficient tool for analyzing the electron
dynamics and for modeling spill-out effects in plasmon simulations [9,10].
A kinetic model simulation [11–14] reveals collectively moving electrons and protons
up to momenta in the 100 MeV range—such projectiles in principle may initiate a few
nuclear reactions in the surrounding polymer atomic layers (cf. Figure 1) [15,16].
Universe 2023, 9, 233
3 of 7
Figure 1. Result of a single nanoantenna simulation using a hydrodynamic (HDM) model implemented into FEM numerical codes. The importance of the in–medium resonant length is shown by
the energy of accelerated electrons from the conducting band in the metal.
Embedding nanoantennas into the fusion remedies another obstacle inherent in present
nuclear fusion techniques. Both MCF and ICF methods are fighting the Rayleigh–Taylor
instabilities when the target is compressed to achieve high nuclear reaction rates. This leads
to more and to less compressed domains, and consequently, only the highly compressed
domains ignite. Due to the rapid expansion arising from the high pressure, the less
compressed domains do not reach ignition at all.
In ultra-relativistic heavy ion reactions, this problem does not occur, since the hadronization process takes place on a timelike oriented hypersurface that is simultaneously in the
whole spatial volume. It is possible to achieve a similar situation in ICF fusion with short
laser ignition pulses of picosecond or femtosecond lengths [17]. For this purpose, one has
to regulate the energy deposition in the fusion target. The implanted nanoantennas, with
an adequately designed density distribution, also help to reach this goal [8,18].
In the following section, we concentrate on the results of spectral investigations and
their correlation within each other.
2. Results: Sers, Crater Sizes, Libs Spectra
The study of the effect of 40 fs laser pulses ranging in energy from 1 mJ to 30 mJ
on the above-described target reveals a monotonic, almost linear dependence of crater
diameters on the increasing pulse energy [19,20]. All measurements are compared at the
best focusing, i.e., at maximal laser field intensity. For the optimal focusing case, down to
a light beam hit diameter of about 20 µm, high enough intensities can be reached (up to
1017 W/cm2 ). At the best focus position plus–minus 1 mm, the reflection drops dramatically
from 70% down to around 10%. In this situation, the effects on the target are not disturbed
by much light reflection on plasma mirrors. The craters are investigated sometimes days
after the shootings, since the target material conserves them in a way similar to that of the
old-fashioned gel-film detectors in nuclear experiments. Hundreds of craters have been
studied by our research team using white light interferometry. As an example cf. Figure 2.
Universe 2023, 9, 233
4 of 7
Additionally, soft spectral measurements on the treated targets were also conducted after the shootings. Most prominently, SERS (surface enhanced Raman scattering) performed
by illumination with infrared lasers with low-energy (ns long) pulses was used to study
molecular vibrations, which are typical in organic polymers. In particular, CH2 and NH
bonds were sought, with the aim of replacing them with CD2 and ND groups. Certainly, a
standard computer model also had to be used in the background to produce and calculate
the wavelength of the corresponding lines in the SERS spectrum [21–23]. Here, we have
found a wide enhancement of the intensity in the ranges characteristic for CD2 and ND,
in an integrated yield way beyond that which could have been counted for the natural
deuterium ratio of D/H ≈ 1/6000 cf. Ref. [19].
Laser-Induced Breakdown Spectroscopy (LIBS) is being employed more and more
in the nuclear/fusion research field of late [24–29], due to the fact that it can sensitively
detect not only heavy but also the lightest elements. It is microdestructive, can be applied
remotely, and in a high-vacuum environment, it is able to provide isotopic resolution for all
three hydrogen isotopes. All these features make this method appealing for laser-ignited
fusion research conducted in a vacuum chamber, where the microplasma generated on the
surface of the target can act as an emission source for LIBS-monitoring measurements. We
are studying the emission intensities of the Balmer alpha line of protium (H) at 656.240 nm
and deuterium (D) at 656.123 nm in the plasma plume. The wavelengths of these lines
differ with 0.117 nanometer, but in a high-vacuum environment, the line widths are smaller
than this; thus, they can be separated.
We are using LIBS to detect a possible excess D being formed from H via nuclear processes. Comparative monitoring experiments are being carried out on UDMA/TEGDMA
co-polymer targets with and without gold nanorods added. For optimization and calibration purposes, we also prepare and use partially deuterized targets made from a mixture
of UDMA and a fully deuterized methyl-methacrylate (MMA) monomer. By changing
the mixing ratio of the monomers, a series of co-polymer targets with varying D content
is fabricated.
Figure 2. Comparison of crater sizes between undoped and Au-doped targets at the same laser
pulse of 27 mJ energy. The pictures are made using white light interferometry and brought to their
respective sizes to agree based on the real micrometer dimension of the horizontal line notations.
Universe 2023, 9, 233
5 of 7
Complementary in situ high-resolution mass spectrometry measurements, aiming at
the detection of low mass/charge ratio charged and chargeless products by controlling the
ionization source, are also currently being performed during the laser irradiation of the
targets. Since these measurements are still ongoing, we cannot report the final results here.
Preliminary experimental data show that the particular experimental conditions and
requirements make the measurements difficult. A large number of repeated measurements
are needed to obtain reliable spectra. Given the association of the laser intensity not only
with the possible ignition of a few fusion reactions, but also with the LIBS emission signal
generation, further increasing of the laser intensity (including better focusing of the beam
and an improved contrast of the pulse with a preceding pedestal) would make this analysis
even more sensitive.
3. Conclusions
In conclusion, we have presented the NAPLIFE collaboration and project with the goal
of studying ultrashort laser pulse energy utilization based on their plasmonic effects in
nanotechnologically manipulated polymer targets towards nuclear fusion ignition energies.
The present preliminary experiments did show a drastic change in the energy absorption
due to gold nanorod embedding into UDMA/TEGDMA copolymer, even at random orientation and low density. The crater sizes observed after laser shots by microscope techniques
reveal a factor of 3–4-fold enhancement, while theoretical simulations of the near field
enhancement (NFE) predict up to a factor of 100 in the field strength enhancement [8,20,30].
The first results from the kinetic modeling of electron and proton motion on and near to the
nanoantennas are also presented [11]. Here, we find proton momenta up to the 100 MeV
range; to overcome the Coulomb barrier in vacuum (without nanoparticle effects on the
screening of it) one needs a factor of roughly 10 more.
Further studies are planned by varying the nanoparticle density, form and material, as
well as trying different coatings, possibly delivering nuclear reactants with near-threshold
resonances, such as boron and beryllium. Beyond our local activity, we plan to join
experiments at facilities providing higher laser pulse energy and better contrast, e.g., at
ELI-ALPS in Szeged, Hungary.
Author Contributions: Conceptualization, T.S.B., N.K. and L.P.C.; Data curation, N.K., M.A.,
M.Á.K., J.K., Á.N.S., R.H., I.R., A.B. (Alexandra Borók), S.Z., R.K., N.T., A.S., D.V., E.T. and M.S.;
Formal analysis, T.S.B. and M.C.; Funding acquisition, T.S.B. and N.K.; Investigation, N.T. and
M.S.; Methodology, T.S.B., N.K., L.P.C., M.V., R.H., A.B. (Attila Bonyár), M.C. and G.G.; Project
administration, T.S.B.; Resources, T.S.B.; Software, I.P., R.H., M.C., A.S., D.V. and E.T.; Validation,
T.S.B., N.K., M.A., I.R. and G.G.; Visualization, I.P.; Writing—original draft, T.S.B.; Writing—review
and editing, N.K., L.P.C., M.V., Á.N.S., G.G. and M.C. All authors have read and agreed to the
published version of the manuscript. Authorship has been limited to those who have contributed
substantially to the work reported.
Funding: This research is funded by NKFIH (National Bureau for Research, Development and
Innovation) grant Nr. 2022-NL-2.1.1.-2022-00002.
Institutional Review Board Statement: Not applicable.
Informed Consent Statement: Not applicable.
Data Availability Statement: No data can be shared beyond the already cited publications to
this date.
Acknowledgments: T.S.B. and N.K. acknowledge enlightening discussions with Johann Rafelski.
The administration of the project is acknowledged to Anett Szeledi. L.P.C. acknowledges support
from Wigner RCP, Budapest.
Conflicts of Interest: The authors declare no conflict of interest.
Universe 2023, 9, 233
6 of 7
References
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
27.
Fusion Power Is Coming Back into Fashion (This Time It Might Even Work). The Economist (Science & Technology), 22 March 2023.
Barszczewska-Rybarek, I.M. A Guide through the Dental Dimethacrylate Polymer Network Structural Characterization and
Interpretation of Physico-Mechanical Properties. Materials 2019, 12, 4057. [CrossRef]
Ding, T.; Mertens, J.; Lombardi, A.; Scherman, O.A.; Baumberg, J.J. Light-Directed Tuning of Plasmon Resonances via PlasmonInduced Polymerization Using Hot Electrons. ACS Photonics 2017, 4, 1453–1458. [CrossRef]
Li, J.; Cushing, S.K.; Meng, F.; Senty, T.R.; Bristow, A.D.; Wu, N. Plasmon-Induced Resonance Energy Transfer for Solar Energy
Conversion. Nat. Photonics 2015, 9, 601–607. [CrossRef]
Minamimoto, H.; Toda, T.; Futashima, R.; Li, X.; Suzuki, K.; Yasuda, S.; Murakoshi, K. Visualization of Active Sites for
Plasmon-Induced Electron Transfer Reactions Using Photoelectrochemical Polymerization of Pyrrole. J. Phys. Chem. C 2016, 120,
16051–16058. [CrossRef]
Wu, K.; Chen, J.; McBride, J.R.; Lian, T. Efficient Hot-Electron Transfer by a Plasmon-Induced Interfacial Charge-Transfer
Transition. Science 2015, 349, 632–635. [CrossRef] [PubMed]
Wang, Z.; Kan, Z.; Shen, M. Study the plasmonic property of gold nanorods highly above damage threshold via single-pulse
spectral hole-burning experiments. Nat. Sci. Rep. 2021, 11, 22232. [CrossRef] [PubMed]
Csete, M.; Szenes, A.; Tóth, E.; Vass, D.; Fekete, O.; Bánhelyi, B.; Papp, I.; Biró, T.; Csernai, L.P.; Kroó, N.; et al. Comparative
study on the uniform energy deposition achievable via optimized plasmonic nanoresonator distributions. Plasmonics 2022, 17,
775–787. [CrossRef]
Maier, S.A. Plasmonics: Fundamentals and Applications; Springer Science and Business Media: New York, NY, USA, 2007.
Ding, W.J.; Lim, J.Z.J.; Do, H.T.B.; Xiong, X.; Mahfoud, Z.; Png, C.E.; Bosman, M.; Ang, L.K.; Wu, L. Particle simulation of
plasmons. Nanophotonics 2020, 9, 3383. [CrossRef]
Papp, I.; Bravina, L.; Csete, M.; Kumari, A.; Mishustin, I.I.; Molnar, D.; Motornenko, A.; Racz, P.; Satarov, L.M.; Stocker, H.; et al.
Kinetic Model Evaluation of the Resilience of Plasmonic Nanoantennas for Laser-Induced Fusion. Phys. Rev. X Energy 2022,
1, 023001. [CrossRef]
Nanbu, K.; Yonemura, G. Weighted particles in Coulomb collision simulations based on the theory of a cumulative scattering
amplitude. J. Comput. Phys. 1998, 145, 639–654. [CrossRef]
Pérez, F.; Gremillet, L.; Decoster, A.; Drouin, M.; Ledfebvre, E. Improved modeling of relativistic collisions and collisional
ionization in particle-in-cell codes. Phys. Plasmas 2012, 19, 083104. [CrossRef]
Arber, T.; Bennett, K.; Brady, C.; Lawrence-Douglas, A.; Ramsay, M.; Sircombe, N.; Gillies, P.; Evans, R.; Schmitz, H.; Bell, A.; et al.
Contemporary particle-in-cell approach to laser-plasma modeling. Plasma Phys. Control. Fusion 2015, 57, 113001. [CrossRef]
Papp, I.; Bravina, L.; Csete, M.; Mishustin, I.N.; Molnár, D.; Motornenko, A.; Satarov, L.M.; Stöcker, H.; Strottman, D.D.;
Szenes, A.; et al. Laser Wake Field Collider. Phys. Lett. A 2021, 396, 12724. [CrossRef]
István, P.; Larissa, B.; Mária, C.; Archana, K.; Anton, M.I.N.; Péter, R.; Horst, S.L.M.S.; András, S.D.S.; Dávid, V.; Nagyné, S.; et al.
Kinetic model of resonant nanoantennas in polymer for laser induced fusion. Front. Phys. 2023, 11, 1116023.
Csernai, L.P.; Strottman, D.D. Volume ignition via time-like detonation in the pellet fusion. Laser Part. Beams 2015, 33, 279–282.
[CrossRef]
Csernai, L.P.; Kroo, N.; Papp, I. Radiation dominated implosion with nano-plasmonics. Laser Part. Beams 2018, 36, 171–178.
[CrossRef]
Bonyár, A.; Szalóki, M.; Borók, A.; Rigó, I.; Kámán, J.; Zangana, S.; Veres, M.; Rácz, P.; Aladi, M.; Kedves, M.; et al. The
Effect of Femtosecond Laser Irradiation and Plasmon Field on the Degree of Conversion of a UDMA-TEGDMA Copolymer
Nanocomposite Doped with Gold Nanorods. Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2022, 23, 13575. [CrossRef] [PubMed]
Rigó, I.; Kámán, J.; Szokol, Ṅ.; Bonyár, A.; Szalóki, M.; Borók, A.; Zangana, S.; Rácz, P.; Aladi, M.; Kedves, M.; et al. Raman spectroscopic characterization of crater walls formed upon single-shot high energy femtosecond laser irradiation of dimethacrylate
polymer doped with plasmonic gold nanorods. arXiv 2022, arXiv:2210.00619. [CrossRef]
Becke, A.D. Density-functional exchange-energy approximation with correct asymptotic behavior. Phys. Rev. A 1998, 38,
3098–3100. [CrossRef]
Lee, C.; Yang, W.; Parr, R.G. Development of the Colle-Salvetti correlation-energy formula into a functional of the electron
density. Phys. Rev. B 1998, 37, 785–789. [CrossRef]
Rassolov, V.A.; Pople, J.A.; Ratner, M.A.; Windus, T.L. 6-31G* basis set for atoms K through Zn. J. Chem. Phys. 1998, 109,
1223–1229. [CrossRef]
Csernai, L.P.; Mishustin, I.N.; Satarov, L.M.; Stoecker, H.; Bravina, L.; Csete, M.; Kámán, J.; Kumari, A.; Motornenko, A.; Papp, I.;
et al. Crater Formation and Deuterium Production in Laser Irradiation of Polymers with Implanted Nano-antennas. arXiv 2022,
arXiv:2211.14031. [CrossRef]
Galbács, G.; Kovács-Széles, É. Nuclear Applications of Laser-Induced Breakdown Spectroscopy. In Laser Induced Breakdown
Spectroscopy (LIBS); Singh, V.K., Tripathi, D.K., Deguchi, Y., Wang, Z., Eds.; Wiley: Hoboken, NJ, USA, 2023. [CrossRef]
Li, C.; Feng, C.L.; Oderji, H.Y.; Luo, G.N.; Ding, H.B. Review of LIBS application in nuclear fusion technology. Front. Phys. 2016,
11, 114–214. [CrossRef]
Wu, J.; Qiu, Y.; Li, X.; Yu, H.; Zhang, Z.; Qiu, A. Progress of laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy in nuclear industry
applications. J. Phys. Appl. Phys. 2020, 53, 023001. [CrossRef]
Universe 2023, 9, 233
28.
29.
30.
7 of 7
Kurniawan, K.H.; Kagawa, K. Hydrogen and deuterium analysis using laser-induced plasma spectroscopy. Appl. Spectrosc. Rev.
2006, 41, 99–130. [CrossRef]
Craners, D.A.; Chinni, R.C. Lares-Induced Breakdown Spectroscopy—Capabilities and Limitations. Appl. Spectrosc. Rev. 2009,
44, 457–506. [CrossRef]
Vass, D.; Szenes, A.; Tóth, E.; Bánhelyi, B.; Papp, I.; Bíró, T.; Csernai, L.P.; Kroó, N.; Csete, M. Plasmonic nanoresonator
distributions for uniform energy deposition in active targets. Opt. Mater. Express 2023, 13, 9–27. [CrossRef]
Disclaimer/Publisher’s Note: The statements, opinions and data contained in all publications are solely those of the individual
author(s) and contributor(s) and not of MDPI and/or the editor(s). MDPI and/or the editor(s) disclaim responsibility for any injury to
people or property resulting from any ideas, methods, instructions or products referred to in the content.