Posted on 07/11/2021 12:16:27 AM PDT by Kevmo
for the cold fusion ping list
There should be an earth shattering “BOOM”, in that headline.
Oh lord, another iteration of this stupidity.
Has any of these reported observations regarding low energy reactions ever been confirmed or repeated? Seems like a lot of junk science, if you will, repeated over the years with zero confirmation.
The concept of METAL such as nickel absorbing ANYTHING gives me brain cramps. Does GLASS absorb anything?
Metal hydrides absorb.
The Cold Fusion/LENR Ping List
http://www.freerepublic.com/tag/coldfusion/index?tab=articles
Keywords: ColdFusion; LENR; lanr; CMNS
chat—science
—
Vortex-L
http://tinyurl.com/pxtqx3y
Best book to get started on this subject:
EXCESS HEAT
Why Cold Fusion Research Prevailed by Charles Beaudette
https://www.abebooks.com/9780967854809/Excess-Heat-Why-Cold-Fusion-0967854806/plp
Updated No Internal Trolling Rules for FR per Jim Robinson
https://freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/3928396/posts
If someone says stop, then stop. Do not enter onto a thread on a topic you don’t like just to disrupt, rattle cages, poke sticks, insult the regulars, or engage in trolling activities, etc. ~Jim Robinson
The issue isn’t whether we allow skepticism, it is whether we allow hyperskeptics and skeptopaths to ruin the scientific dialog. Civil discussion of the involved science is desired.
😎
Hush now - don’t you know that FR is against censorship...except for when they’re for it...some who trash your scientific discussions because they think science should be “purer” also find “Noble Cause” clauses in the Constitution...eventually, their opinions cease to count and should cause you no concern as they bare their asses.
Interesting.
I was just talking about this the other day with my barber.
Palladium absorbing hydrogen
More technical
https://www.sciencedirect.com/topics/engineering/hydrogen-absorption
What makes an element a metal, is that the electrons are loosely attached to the atoms. This is what allows metals to conduct electricity. When hydrogen gets absorbed, it turns into electrons and protons in the lattice.
Yes, this Anomalous Heat Effect has been replicated in more than 153 peer reviewed journals, the first round by the top ~100 who’s who in electrochemistry.
https://freerepublic.com/focus/f-chat/3963819/posts
Yes...quite a few things. And glass leaks some things into whatever it is "containing". It turns out that on molecular and atomic scales, EVERYTHING is porous.
Please leave this thread. Start your own on the subject.
Metals absorb and react to other elements. That is why most metal has to be extracted from ore.
Since glass is "nonporous" most odors from stinky substances can be removed from glass containers with a thorough cleaning and the use of a detergent or acid that will react with whatever residue has been embedded in the surface.
Glass reacts with various substances. Hydrofluoric acid dissolves glass and even a strong solution of Sodium Hydroxide can eat eventually through a glass container.
+1
Bring back vacuum tubes.
Solid State is the future for LENR just like it was for electronics for 50 years.
Moddel,G.;Weerakkody, A.; Doroski, D.; Bartusiak, D.
Optical-Cavity-Induced Current. Symmetry 2021, 13,517.
https://arxiv.org/ftp/arxiv/papers/2101/2101.03085.pdf
doi.org/10.3390/sym13030517
Garret Moddel,*Ayendra Weerakkody, David Doroski, and Dylan Bartusiak
“Casimir-cavity-induced conductance changes” PHYSICAL REVIEW RESEARCH 3,
L022007 (2021)
https://journals.aps.org/prresearch/pdf/10.1103/PhysRevResearch.3.L022007
“The differential conductance of metal-insulator-metal devices increases
when they are joined with Casimir cavities. An imbalance in injection of
hot charge carriers from each side of the insulator is increased
with thinner cavities that suppress more quantum vacuum modes. The result
is an observed increase in conductance. Additional conductance changes,
with insulator thickness and other device parameters, are consistent with
an imbalance-induced injection of hot carriers. In addition to the
conductance changes, we observe anomalous offsets in the current and
voltage. We interpret the conductance changes in terms of del-E del-t
uncertainty-principle-like limit to the injection of hot carriers from
zero-point fluctuations.”
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