EAST Tokamak experiments exceed plasma density limit, offering new approach to fusion ignition

19 janvier 2026 par Véronique Avy
In a new episode of the France Culture podcast Avec Sciences, Dominique Escande, emeritus research director at the CNRS in the PIIM laboratory, shares his expertise on a major breakthrough in nuclear fusion: a recent study on the EAST tokamak in China reveals a new ignition mode capable of exceeding the previously accepted density limit.

To produce fusion on Earth, extreme conditions must be recreated: heating matter to over 100 million degrees, transforming it into plasma, then confining it long enough for the hydrogen nuclei to fuse. Unlike stars, where gravity naturally provides this compression, humans must use ingenuity. Two main approaches dominate today: inertial confinement, which briefly compresses a target with lasers, and magnetic confinement, which traps plasma in powerful magnetic fields, particularly in machines called tokamaks. But this plasma is extremely unstable. The higher its temperature and the greater the amount of matter it contains, the more difficult it becomes to control. This boundary, identified empirically in the 1980s, is known as the Greenwald limit and, until now, could not be exceeded.

Listen to the podcast here

Link to the Science Advances press release: EAST Tokamak experiments exceed plasma density limit, offering a new approach to fusion ignition

Link to the article published in Nature magazine: Chinese nuclear fusion reactor pushes plasma beyond a crucial limit: what will happen next

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