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MIT Plasma Science and Fusion Center

Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyPhysics organization stubsPlasma physics facilitiesPlasma physics stubs
MIT Plasma Science and Fusion Center 01
MIT Plasma Science and Fusion Center 01

The Plasma Science and Fusion Center (PSFC) at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) is a university research center for the study of plasmas, fusion science and technology. It has more than 250 researchers, staff, and students across 7 labs, and is one of MIT's largest research labs. It was originally founded in 1976 as the Plasma Fusion Center (PFC) at the request and with the collaboration of the U.S. Department of Energy. The original grant was for construction and operation of a tokamak reactor Alcator A, the first in a series of small, high-field tokamaks, followed by Alcator C (1978) and Alcator C-Mod (1993). MIT's most recent tokamak, Alcator C-Mod, ran from 1993 to 2016. In 2016, the project pressure reached 2.05 atmospheres—a 15 percent jump over the previous record of 1.77 atmospheres with a plasma temperature of 35 million degrees C, sustaining fusion for 2 seconds, yielding 600 trillion fusion reactions. The run involved a 5.7 tesla magnetic field. It reached this milestone on its final day of operation. In 2018, the PSFC began developing a conceptual design for the SPARC tokamak in collaboration with Commonwealth Fusion Systems. SPARC intends to use new YBCO superconducting magnets in order to achieve net fusion energy in a compact device. From August 18th to the 23rd, 2025, Plasma Science and Fusion Center (PSFC) hosted their sixth Computational Physics School for Fusion Research (CPS-FR) summer program; This program originally began in August 2019. The program was designed to help graduate students, post-doctorates, and researchers build, practice, and develop the skills to apply performance computing and data science tools to fusion energy research.

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MIT Plasma Science and Fusion Center
Albany Street, Cambridge

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N 42.359944444444 ° E -71.098444444444 °
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Albany Street
02238 Cambridge
Massachusetts, United States
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MIT Plasma Science and Fusion Center 01
MIT Plasma Science and Fusion Center 01
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