Posted on 07/19/2008 2:47:21 PM PDT by mamelukesabre
Electrical-energy-storage unit (EESU) utilizing ceramic and integrated-circuit technologies for replacement of electrochemical batteries
IS THIS A HOAX? IS THIS FOR REAL?
Sure it does:
( 1 of 1 ) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- United States Patent 7,033,406 Weir , et al. April 25, 2006 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Electrical-energy-storage unit (EESU) utilizing ceramic and integrated-circuit technologies for replacement of electrochemical batteries Abstract An electrical-energy-storage unit (EESU) has as a basis material a high-permittivity composition-modified barium titanate ceramic powder. This powder is double coated with the first coating being aluminum oxide and the second coating calcium magnesium aluminosilicate glass. The components of the EESU are manufactured with the use of classical ceramic fabrication techniques which include screen printing alternating multilayers of nickel electrodes and high-permittivitiy composition-modified barium titanate powder, sintering to a closed-pore porous body, followed by hot-isostatic pressing to a void-free body. The components are configured into a multilayer array with the use of a solder-bump technique as the enabling technology so as to provide a parallel configuration of components that has the capability to store electrical energy in the range of 52 kWh. The total weight of an EESU with this range of electrical energy storage is about 336 pounds. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Inventors: Weir; Richard Dean (Cedar Park, TX), Nelson; Carl Walter (Austin, TX) Assignee: Eestor, inc. (Cedar Park, TX) Appl. No.: 09/833,609 Filed: April 12, 2001
The patent number did not come up. I have found many patents of some really interesting stuff. One guy invented a magnetic motor that put out 1200 watts of power with no known input. It was an interesting story.
Sorry about that.
well let’s just say this does work and works good.The @$$hat fed and states are going to have to introduce some friggin’ HUGH and SERIES tax to make up for their “lost” revenues...............
What’s wrong with your math is that you didn’t include the DBM factor. Adding that increases the charging rate by whatever you need to make it work.
It defended you from using it!!!
Yeah, I have had a few of their updates that were bad mistakes. They probably turned off a script the USPTO was looking for. Somehow, their TIF Viewer for the patent figures no longer works on this machine. It does on the others, including the Linux machines, though.
Harry Reid sez, “Batteries make us sick”.
Well I guess I misspoke
Sort of
No. Coal and oil make us sick per Harry. But we can add batteries, wind, air, water, solar, democrats, and life in general to Harry’s list
for the renewable energy ping list
Of course, from what I can see, the most promising power generation technology will come from the guys who are doing Deuterium electrolysis using a Palladium electrode and seeing excess heat. If the American Physical Society is to be believed, this process is a chemical battery that consumes its own chemical ash.
Heres a sample of publications on this subject:
Stringham, R. Anomalous heat production by cavitation. in 1998 IEEE International Ultrasonic Symposium. 1998. Sendai, Japan.
Marini, P., et al., Protocollo innovativo per l ipercaricamento di catodi di Palladio con Idrogeno messo a punto allINFN di Frascati, in 21mo Secolo. 1999.
Miley, G.H., et al. Future Power Generation by LENR with Thin-Film Electrodes (PowerPoint slides). in 233rd ACS National Meeting. 2007. Chicago, IL.
Mosier-Boss, P.A., et al. Pd/D Co-Deposition: Excess Power Generation and Its Origin (paper and PowerPoint slides). in 233rd ACS National Meeting. 2007. Chicago, IL.
Dash, J., R. Kopecek, and S. Miguet. Excess Heat and Unexpected Elements from Aqueous Electrolysis with Titanium and Palladium Cathodes. in 32nd Intersociety Energy Conversion Engineering Conference. 1997.
Mizuno, T., T. Akimoto, and T. Ohmori. Confirmation of anomalous hydrogen generation by plasma electrolysis. in 4th Meeting of Japan CF Research Society. 2003. Iwate, Japan: Iwate University.
Alguero, M., et al. An Experimental Method to Measure the Rate of H(D)-Absorption by a Pd Cathode During the Electrolysis of an Aqueous Solution: Advantages and Disadvantages.
Asaoka, Y., et al. Simultaneous Measurement Device of Heat and Neutron of Heavy Water Electrolysis with Palladium Cathode.
Biberian, J.P. Excess Heat Measurements in AlLaO3 Doped with Deuterium.1995. Monte-Carlo, Monaco: IMRA Europe, Sophia Antipolis Cedex, France.
Botta, E., et al. Search for 4He Production from Pd/D2 Systems in Gas Phase.
http://www.lenr-canr.org/LibFrame4.html
With li-ions, all you have to do is create a small short and they dispose of themselves, dramatically.
I still am sensitive to camera flashes as they exactly approximate the ‘blow’ sequence of a li-ion battery pack gone bad.
Think about one large enough to power a car.
You think it’s a Bandini Scam too, eh?
Perpetual motion. Sort of like the Obama Campaign.
Be Seeing You,
Chris
You need a monostable fratilizer to make a flux capacitor work properly. Otherwise it will go asynchronous and the fallopian tubes will explode
Only if the Dilithium crystals fail to adjust the horizonal hold.
What Would Scotty Do?
Harry needs to watch this:
http://americantruckersatwar.com/2008/06/24/george-carlin-save-the-earth/
Reid needs tar and feathers.
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