Posted on 07/14/2012 5:44:08 PM PDT by Kevmo
Cold Fusion: Progress Report
By Brian Westenhaus | Mon, 09 July 2012 21:57 |
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Your humble writer has been watching for the news out of the International Low Energy Nuclear Reactions Symposium, ILENRS-12 held at The College of William and Mary Sadler Center early last week. At long last, after years of little available event news were getting some interesting bits out.
The process of Low Energy Nuclear Reactions (LENR) or Cold Fusion or your choice on an array of ideas on what to call it, have required the element palladium as a catalyst, that isnt consumed, but represents an expensive initial outlay. Current commercial efforts use nickel instead, because it is plentiful and cheap and works almost as well.
The fuel of choice has been heavy water, which is non-radioactive and can be recovered from ocean saltwater. Four ounces of heavy water today costs about $50 and contains enough energy when converted to electricity to supply the average American with electricity for a lifetime. The commercial efforts are focused on plain fresh water, some with a hydrogen gas flow, now.
A LENR start is dramatic and unmistakable when it occurs much more heat is released than any conceivable chemical process could generate. Such heat can be used for industrial processes, space heating or hot water, or it can be converted to electricity.
Todays remaining problems concern reliability and control.
Whatever it is that makes LENR work, the phenomenon seems to have a mind of its own, and decides when to turn itself on and off. The commercial work that seems closest to a resolution of these problems are holding their cards close to their chests, hoping to be first to enter a huge and lucrative market.
A bit of background is in order because for LENR or cold fusion news isnt appearing in papers published in major scholarly journals a point we need to keep in mind. The story very briefly:
Along with government censorship, which we can expect in proper circumstances, political censorship in an effort to not unduly alarm the public in the mainstream media theres a wall still up of scientific censorship for LENR. The Internet is putting a foundation out for specialty and niche news, blogs and social networks that are exposing more information.
LENR has occupied a scientific backwater now for 23 years. Demonstrations have been repeated again and again, a great deal of know-how has been acquired and shared over the Internet. Scientists who stuck with it have been vindicated to those who are in the interested in the field.
In 1989, Martin Fleischmann, a scientist at the top of his field, with Stanley Pons told the world they had ran a LENR in a test tube. Within a year scientists from prestigious labs around the world spilled announcements they had tried to duplicate what Fleischmann had reported with no success. The results were un-reproducible. Cold Fusion was to become a joke about junk science.
About a year and a half back an Italian entrepreneur named Andrea Rossi demonstrated a cold fusion boiler, and announced the taking orders for 2012 delivery. The following months have brought a lot of others from the personal labs and quiet private researchers out into view.
Mr. Rossi has made a lot of web traffic and the first thing we see from the Symposium is the estimable Jed Rothwell who operates the prime scientific source for the field, LENR-CANR.ORG, starting a forum thread that became a worthy look at Mr. Rossi from those who know him. With subjective understanding a better objective view of Mr. Rossi and what he has going on is covered in the forum thread.
Before one begins a click through to the thoughts on Mr. Rossi his technology and business acumen lets note a fundamental problem that government censorship.
So far the patent ability for LENR isnt coming. The US Patent Office has a backlog of dozens of applications on which it is not acting, demanding cumbersome and expensive on-site demonstrations in addition to the usual paper filings. Its not much better overseas. This puts the inventors in a very unusual spot. With no intellectual property rights, whatever is offered can simply be taken with poor grounds for compensation.
That plus the prospect that whatever works and is verified will become the top media circus in all of mankinds history. Whatever we have, as reasoned and responsible as we try to be, what were getting from the commercial effort is so clouded, confused and in organizational disarray as to be without credibility.
Still, out in the real world, LENR science is in better shape. Italy, Japan, Israel and Greece are the current world leaders. China is suspected to have a major LENR program. Entrepreneurs and venture capitalists are quietly pursuing the pot of gold, isolated and in secret, avoiding the heavy hand of the US government, which might be a very good thing when commercial prospects get to market.
But the news is in a whole new arena. We wont be getting papers and studies that can connect to existing technology for a long while. The commercial folks are working in a world more primitive than a Wild West situation and every bit as likely to go into a cold war framework or legal battles just as soon as someone seems to be making money.
The stakes are huge. Something dramatic is bound to happen, and a lot of politicians, bureaucrats, scientists and academic administrators will be gravely embarrassed its essentially too late for them already. Yet, they will claim that they were simply surprised, that they could not have seen this coming.
But we arent and are looking forward to the future.
By. Brian Westenhaus
The inevitable mention of Kevmo's favorite con artist.
So where's it being used for such purposes?
That's right.
Nowhere.
That's called "fool's gold'. But you can find a deposit and work it down and there's just all sorts of mineral wealth in there.
That's called "fool's gold'. But you can find a deposit and work it down and there's just all sorts of mineral wealth in there.
Still not sure whether to use the pixie dust to get the thing started or use it after it starts to keep it running. Might e-mail Disney ... they are experts in fantasy creations.
Please stop stalking me.
Please stop stalking me.
Has anyone involved determined the conversion efficiency of this reaction? How much energy can be obtained from a mole of D2O? What are the daughter products? Are you left with helium atoms? or protium atoms? Can you generate more fuel i.e. deutreium and tritium in the process? It’s obviously a chemical reaction, because if it was truly a fusion reaction, the test setup would have vaporized itself, and everything around it. Even if D2 atoms were fusing in a nickel-palladium matrix, the energy resulting would be tremendous. It would have to be a chemical reaction that exploits the unique characterisics of the deuterium atom. With that being said, there is the possibilty that a reaction could occur within the crystalline structure of the catalyst. The only other process that I know of that can produce a sustainable hot fusion reaction is inertial electrostatic confinement. The neutron output is only around 10 17th or so though. The systems make great fast neutron emitters, but they make lousy power plants.
“Never happen. Too many BIG interests will be sure it never sees the light of day. Big Oil, Big Wind, Big Bio, Big Coal, etc.,,,take your pick.”
Nonsense.
If it works, someone - lots of folks - will make a ton of money on it.
There are a lot of entrepreneurial “Davids” out there itching to take on the BIG Interest “Goliaths”.
If I were “BIG Coal”, I’d be looking at this REAL CLOSE, in case this Carbon Footprint nonsense does not go away.
There are dozens of theories. None of them have been validated, a few of them have been invalidated.
My favorite is KP Sinha’s theory. Hagelstein’s latest theory is getting some mindshare. I think in the end, the solution will prove to be a combination of several theories.
Here’s a good place to start:
http://lenr-canr.org/
With vast amounts of power available to the individual, what need have most of us for the existing infrastructure of delivering energy, when we could br running it out of a small reactor in the back yard?
***It would be a classic case of disruptive technology. I think the last time society saw that large of a change was when the automobile became affordable.
Or when any kind of porn was available for anonymous downloading 24/7.
***Nope. Automobiles & cheap power change life for 100% of the population. Free porn just appeals to the male population, mostly.
Not government. A bunch of physics professors who are already sucking on the government tit. To the tune of $250 Billion.
And I'm still waiting for you to "show me the voodoo" on those two papers on heat and helium.
Energy output (experimentally measured/peer reviewed) ~23 MEV per He4 produced. And He4 is the final product...no "daughter products" are made. I'll leave the "energy per mole" calculation up to you.
"Can you generate more fuel i.e. deutreium and tritium in the process? Its obviously a chemical reaction, because if it was truly a fusion reaction, the test setup would have vaporized itself, and everything around it.
No. It is CONTROLLED fusion. That's the whole point. There is evidence that tritium can be produced, but it is a very small side reaction.
"Even if D2 atoms were fusing in a nickel-palladium matrix, the energy resulting would be tremendous."
And that it is. With ~26 MEV per He4 produced.
"It would have to be a chemical reaction that exploits the unique characterisics of the deuterium atom. With that being said, there is the possibilty that a reaction could occur within the crystalline structure of the catalyst."
Nope. Too much energy.
"The only other process that I know of that can produce a sustainable hot fusion reaction is inertial electrostatic confinement. The neutron output is only around 10 17th or so though. The systems make great fast neutron emitters, but they make lousy power plants.
True.
Here are some sources about helium production via LENR:
Storms, E., A Review of the Cold Fusion Effect. J. Sci. Expl., 1996. 10(2): p. 185.
Karabut, A.B., Y.R. Kucherov, and I.B. Savvatimova, Nuclear product ratio for glow discharge in deuterium. Phys. Lett. A, 1992. 170: p. 265.
Miles, M., B.F. Bush, and J.J. Lagowski, Anomalous effects involving excess power, radiation, and helium production during D2O electrolysis using palladium cathodes. Fusion Technol., 1994. 25: p. 478.
Gozzi, D., et al., X-ray, heat excess and 4He in the D/Pd system. J. Electroanal. Chem., 1998. 452: p. 251.
Bush, B.F. and J.J. Lagowski. Methods of Generating Excess Heat with the Pons and Fleischmann Effect: Rigorous and Cost Effective Calorimetry, Nuclear Products Analysis of the Cathode and Helium Analysis. in The Seventh International Conference on Cold Fusion. 1998. Vancouver, Canada: ENECO, Inc., Salt Lake City, UT.
Isobe, Y., et al. Search for Coherent Deuteron Fusion by Beam and Electrolysis Experiments. in 8th International Conference on Cold Fusion. 2000. Lerici (La Spezia), Italy: Italian Physical Society, Bologna, Italy.
McKubre, M.C.H., et al. The Emergence of a Coherent Explanation for Anomalies Observed in D/Pd and H/Pd System: Evidence for 4He and 3He Production. in 8th International Conference on Cold Fusion. 2000. Lerici (La Spezia), Italy: Italian Physical Society, Bologna, Italy.
Arata, Y. and Y.C. Zhang, Helium (4He, 3He) within deuterated Pd-black. Proc. Jpn. Acad., Ser. B, 1997. 73: p. 1.
Just like big equine kept the internal combustion engine under wraps.
I don’t debate sillness as science. Science is repeatable. Cold fusion is not, peer review be damned. This is all hype and is not recognized as scientific effort for a reason. Scientific scams are as old as science itself.
Science does not happen but once. — Newton.
I don’t debate sillness as science. Science is repeatable. Cold fusion is not, peer review be damned. This is all hype and is not recognized as scientific effort for a reason. Scientific scams are as old as science itself.
Science does not happen but once. — Newton.
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