Institution of Mechanical Engineers
Improving the world through engineering
Event organised by ICE
Nuclear Fusion is the process which powers the sun, but can we harness it on earth? Magnetically confined fusion has been under experimental development since the 1960s, with improvements happening faster than Moore's Law for computer chips. In this lecture, the foremost design of fusion reactor – the Tokamak - will be explained and features of the two fusion reactors located just south of Oxford in Culham - the UK-owned MAST and the European-owned JET will be explored, along with their input to the next large fusion device being built in Cadarache, France: ITER.
Fusion, the nuclear reaction that powers the Sun and the stars, is a potential source of safe, non-carbon emitting and virtually limitless energy. Harnessing fusion's power is the goal of ITER, which has been designed as the key experimental step between today's fusion research machines and tomorrow's fusion power plants.
Improving the world through engineering
The Institution of Engineering and Technology is a multidisciplinary professional engineering institution.
Creating a better energy future for our members and society by accelerating a just global energy transition to net zero.
Aimed at students, this series of seven webinars which runs until May 2025 will enable you to learn about professional life from recent graduates from across the industry.
Join us for the ICE’s 16th Alternative Dispute Resolution workshop to discover the intricacies of adjudication in the UK. This year’s workshop will look at the role of technology and digitalisation in modern construction disputes.
The presentation describes the successful integration of existing, temporary, and permanent works in the renewal of the metallic hog-back spans of the Grade II* listed Barmouth Viaduct.