The Direct Fusion Drive (DFD), a compact, anuetronic fusion engine, will enable more challenging exploration missions in the solar system. The engine proposed here uses a deuterium-helium-3 reaction to produce fusion energy by employing a novel field-reversed configuration (FRC) for magnetic confinement. The FRC has a simple linear solenoid coil geometry yet generates higher plasma pressure, hence higher fusion power density, for a given magnetic field strength than other magnetic-confinement plasma devices. Waste heat generated from the plasma's Bremsstrahlung and synchrotron radiation is recycled to maintain the fusion temperature. The charged reaction products, augmented by additional propellant, are exhausted through a magnetic nozzle. A 1 MW DFD is presented in the context of a mission to deploy the James Webb Space Telescope (6200 kg) from GPS orbit to a Sun-Earth L2 halo orbit in 37 days using just 353 kg of propellant and about half a kilogram of 3 He. The engine is designed to produce 40 N of thrust with an exhaust velocity of 56.5 km/s and has a specific power of 0.18 kW/kg.
Horizontally stacked nanosheet gate-all-around devices enable area scaling of transistor technology, while providing improved electrostatic control over FinFETs for a wide range of channel widths within a single chip for simultaneous low power applications and high-performance computing. Fabrication of inner spacers and Si channels is challenging, but essential to device performance, yield, and reliability. We elucidate these challenges and detail their impact to the device. We overcome these challenges with novel, highly selective, isotropic SiGe dry etch techniques which enable precise, robust inner spacer and channel formation. Finally, we demonstrate substantial improvements to relevant device parameters: resistance, drive current, transconductance, threshold voltage, breakdown voltage, bias temperature instability and overall variability.
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