10KW LENR Demonstrator?

Point out news stories, on the net or in mainstream media, related to polywell fusion.

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chrismb
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Post by chrismb »

93143 wrote:Dan, Kiteman - you're both wrong. But Dan is wronger.

When you add a proton to nickel-62, it is true that the proton's binding energy decreases dramatically. It is also true that the binding energy of every other nucleon involved increases slightly, which offsets the former much more than the graph seems to imply, due to the 62:1 number ratio.
Sorry to point out, 'fraid to say I think you've got that the wrong way around too! But the point is made, nonetheless.

Let's re-write this so Dan might be happy with this:

1) Nuclear [fusion] reactions involving nucleii above ~62-Ni involve a decrease of their nucleon binding energy (for an increase in atomic number).
A decrease of nucleon binding energy is endothermic.
2) Nuclear [fusion] reactions involving nucleii below ~62-Ni involve an increase of their nucleon binging energy (for an increase in atomic number).
An increase of nucleon binding energy is exothermic.
3) In the case of p+62Ni->63Cu, neither 1 nor 2 are infringed because the nucleons in the 62Ni nucleus experience a reduction of their binding energy, and the proton experiences an increase in its binding energy.

In the case of p+62Ni->63Cu, the proton's binding energy goes up by ~8MeV, while the 62Ni's [original nucleon] binding energy comes down by ~2MeV.

D Tibbets
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Post by D Tibbets »

KitemanSA wrote:
93143 wrote: Dan, Kiteman - you're both wrong. But Dan is wronger.

When you add a proton to nickel-62, it is true that the proton's binding energy decreases dramatically. It is also true that the binding energy of every other nucleon involved increases slightly, which offsets the former much more than the graph seems to imply, due to the 62:1 number ratio.
Thank you for the detail, you are correct in intent. Please note however that we were talking approximations.
93143 wrote: ...and Kiteman? You made a math error in your example. 62*8.95 is 554.9, not 554.28. This gives a larger reaction energy, by 0.62 MeV (notice that it is the binding energy difference times the product nucleon count...).
...oops... I think it may have been a transcription error. I am even worse at typoing than at math! :oops:
I admit some of my reasoning has been ambigous at best and missleading at worse.


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nickel-62

http://www.chem.purdue.edu/gchelp/howto ... energy.htm
...However, nuclear binding energy is often expressed as kJ/mol of nuclei or as MeV/nucleon
.
Using energy per mole may be enlightening. It is more direct, without having to consider the energy per nucleon.


Finally (once again), I'll let a link do the talking as I am not doing so well myself.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_binding_energy

Also, Cu63 can release a little more energy than Ni62 if it is broken down completely. It can even release a little excess energy when Ni62 is fused to Cu63. I'll concede that point. BUT, this ignores the energy required to add the proton to the nucleus. This is the Coulomb repulsion that has to be overcome in order for the proton to reach the nucleus against the increasingly strong electromagnetic repulsion from all of the protons already present. This barrier for light elements are in the range of 10s to 100s of KeV for reasonable fusion rates. By the time you reach iron or nickel the Coulomb barrier is in the millions of eVs
This factor has to be figured into the final energy balance. The change in energy has to be greater than this 'injection' energy for there to be a net gain (exothermic)

This injection energy might be decreased through some catalytic effect so that net gains might be possible, but the catalyst would need to be some synthetic material. As I argued, there are just to many possible natural situations where non synthetic material arrangements could occur and be easily observed (if you survived). If there is some catalytic action in typical LENR reactions of light elements, the effectiveness of the catalyst in the Rossi device would need to be perhaps ~ 10,000 times greater- the Coulomb barrier is ~ 100 times greater and the output is ~ 100 times greater.

So, I fall back to the position that one- a truly phenomenal catalyst must be discovered only now after over 20 years of intense LENR research by many labs. Rossi would have to be extremely lucky or smart. And, this is dependent on the LENR reactions working at all- it is still not resolved.

Secondly, the the radiation from several thousands of watts of energy output would not be blocked by a thin layer of lead if a significant portion of it is in the form of gamma rays .

Of course other arguments about very sloppy and partially hidden experimental design leaves several obvious paths for fraud, in addition to a moderately wide range in the accuracy of the measurements. All of the secrets seems to be contained in the can, so allowing a third party to design a setup to test the effects which is much more transparent and reliable would go a very long way towards validating the device. He could still insist on the absence of gamma ray diagnostics.

I don't know what the radiation output would be. Assuming most of the energy was in the form of Beta emissions, and gammas only carried away ~ 10% of the energy would mean gammas of ~ 600KeV. A centimeter of lead would only reduce this radiation by a factor of perhaps 10-100X. This means that you would be exposed to ~ 10-100 Watts of gamma radiation for hours, days or even months. Consider that a chest X-ray would be photons at perhaps 50KeV, and ~ 50 milliamps for perhaps 0.1 seconds. This would translate into ~ 250 Watts. This means you would be exposed to the equivalent of ~ 1 chest x-ray every 2 to 20 seconds . . Using the lower number, this would be ~ three chest X-rays per minute. or ~ 200 per hour. Each chest X-ray might represent ~ 20-50 mREM of radiation exposure (this is an older setup where exposure intensifiers are not used). So you would be exposed to ~ 20mRem * 200 exposures / hr, or ~ 4 REM per hour. . If you hung around for one day you would likely develop radiation poisoning, and in several more days an increasing chance of dieing in the short term.

Even if you reduce this with distance, lower energy gammas and/ or fewer gammas, the improvement might only be a hundred fold. That might give a daily exposure of ~ 40 mREM per hour, or almost 1 REM per day. Not something you would want in your home . Even a nuclear worker would reach his yearly allowable dose in only 5 days.

Of course this is supposition under some assumed conditions, but it illustrates how minimal the gamma contribution has to be before this feeble 1 cm lead shielding would suffice. It raises further skepticism that this is actually a fusion process, at least by conventional understanding of neucleosynthsis.
Is there a nuclear chemist that can calculate the gamma output? Is it even possible to calculate a likely range given the vague descriptions provided?



Ps: the energy difference between Ni62 and CU63 in the form of nuclear binding energy would be:

Ni62 has 8.7945 MeV per nucleon * 62 nucleons = 545.259 MeV
Cu63 has 8.758 MeV per nucleon * 63 nucleons = 551.754 MeV
The difference is 551.754- 545.259 = 6.4495 MeV.

From this I am guesstimating that the average energy needed to force a proton past the Coulomb barrier would in this example be ~ 6.5 MeV- thus it is endothermic by this reasoning. So the new physics would be a unheard of catalytic reaction that lowered the Coulomb barrier resistance to ~ 0.04 eV (400 degrees C)..

If this was the case then ~ 30 grams of accumulated copper over ~ 6 months would represent ~ 1/2 mole of copper or ~ 3 *10^23 fusions/ transmutations. Each delivering ~ 6.5 MeV. of excess energy. This would represent a total of ~ 2 *10^31 MeV of energy.
For comparison ~ 1 milliwatt of power comes from ~ 10^9 DD fusions/ sec. and with an assumption of a generous 10 MeV of excess energy per DD fusion , this would result in ~ 10^16 MeV per milliwatt or ~ 10^19 MeV per Watt. A claimed Rossi device output of ~ 10,000 Watts would represent ~ 10^23 MeV output per second. This divided into the above number would result in ~ 10^ 8 seconds of operation before 30 grams of copper was produced.
10^8 seconds is ~ 1200 days, or ~ 3 years.
There is about 6 times too much copper present. What does that mean? It means nothing. Without a control which shows the amount of natual copper isotopes contained in the virgin mixture, you cannot say how much additional copper was created, except that you have a minimal amount of ~ 5 grams. Of course there would need to be reasonable assurance that the samples provided are representative, and not artificially doctored.

Dan Tibbets
To error is human... and I'm very human.

93143
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Post by 93143 »

chrismb wrote:Sorry to point out, 'fraid to say I think you've got that the wrong way around too!
Nope. Binding energy is negative. Therefore it either increases towards zero or decreases away from zero. My own personal convention...
D Tibbets wrote:From this I am guesstimating that the average energy needed to force a proton past the Coulomb barrier would in this example be ~ 6.5 MeV- thus it is endothermic by this reasoning.
...so where does the extra mass go? The listed nuclear masses are rest masses.

Any extra energy you add to try to catalyze the fusion reaction just shows back up on top of the energy of the reaction itself once it happens.

Think about it this way. Theoretically, quantum tunneling could result in a fusion at an extremely low CoM energy, in the eV or less. That's exothermic, right? So if you add 6.5 MeV to make it go faster, what eats that extra 6.5 MeV? Nothing; you get it back at the end. So the reaction is still strongly exothermic.

Remember, the Coulomb barrier is a barrier in the sense that it goes up and then down again, like a wall or a berm, rather than just up like a hill. That's why quantum tunneling is possible. You can't just arbitrarily add the Coulomb barrier on top of the rest energy.

chrismb
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Joined: Sat Dec 13, 2008 6:00 pm

Post by chrismb »

93143 wrote:
chrismb wrote:Sorry to point out, 'fraid to say I think you've got that the wrong way around too!
Nope. Binding energy is negative. Therefore it either increases towards zero or decreases away from zero. My own personal convention...
OK, I'll take the point as a 9' convention, but clearly there is no such thing as 'negative energy', so if the proton has a binding energy of zero it can't go down, in any usually accepted usage (and not the one used here to date - so let's try not confusing DT any further! :wink: ).

The binding energy should be, perhaps in this I agree with you, as an 'unbinding energy'. :? The amount of energy required to 'unbind' a nucleon from 62NI is the MOST amount of energy per nucleon for any nucleus, whereas protons clearly do/can not need to be 'unbound' any further.

KitemanSA
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Location: OlyPen WA

Post by KitemanSA »

D Tibbets wrote: http://www.chem.purdue.edu/gchelp/howto ... energy.htm
However, nuclear binding energy is often expressed as kJ/mol of nuclei or as MeV/nucleon
.
Using energy per mole may be enlightening. It is more direct, without having to consider the energy per nucleon.
Thanks for the link. the point you keep missing is the bolded part:
Your Link wrote:(8.8387 x 10-11 J/nucleus)[1 MeV/(1.602 x 10-13 J)] (1 nucleus/63 nucleons) = 8.758 MeV/nucleon
which I have been trying to point out to you all along.
D Tibbets wrote: Finally (once again), I'll let a link do the talking as I am not doing so well myself.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_binding_energy
Also, Cu63 can release a little more energy than Ni62 if it is broken down completely. It can even release a little excess energy when Ni62 is fused to Cu63. I'll concede that point. BUT, this ignores the energy required to add the proton to the nucleus.
Dan,
Binding energy is rest mass, ground state to rest mass, ground state. Any additions/subtractions etc. for intermediate processes, whatever intermediate processes, are automatically taken into account. If you had to add mass (as energy) to the starting particles in order to overcome a coulomb barrier it either shows up as mass in the end particles or is otherwise shed with the rest of the released energy. The change in binding energy is the sum total energy released/absorbed by the reaction.

Adding H (a proton) to ANYTHING releases that proton's binding energy. If the "anything" is >~16O, the energy released will be >=~7.5 MeV. (actually, taking the slight decrease in PER nucleon into account, this might be as low as ~6MeV). None the less, it is ALWAYS exothermic. (with the sole exception of PERHAPS, 4He+N... (I should do this reaction and see)).

parallel
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Location: Philadelphia, PA

Post by parallel »

Richard P. Feynman said "nobody understands quantum mechanics." Reading the various theories put forward to explain the E-Cat makes me think nobody understands how that works either.

I find it aesthetically more pleasing to believe that it probably requires a new theory, not only because I like Carver Meade's theory of electrons being waves rather than particles.

A recent experiment showed that some researchers have mapped complete trajectories of single photons in Young’s famous double slit experiment and so chipped away at the sacred Copenhagen interpretation of QM.
http://physicsworld.com/cws/article/news/46193
The finding takes an important first step towards measuring complimentary variables of a quantum system – which until now has been considered impossible as a consequence of the Heisenberg uncertainty principle.
See also Quantum Mysteries Disentangled by Ron Garret that is fun. http://www.flownet.com/ron/QM.pdf
He quotes Cerf and Adami:
... the particle-like behavior of quantum systems is an illusion
[emphasis in original] created by the incomplete observation of a
quantum (entangled) system with a macroscopic number of degrees
of freedom.
and
... randomness is not an essential cornerstone of quantum
measurement but rather an illusion created by it.

I add this useless discussion of science as chrismp says that this (not reporting on new data) is the only contribution to this blog that counts./sarc off.

Roll on October when we may get some real news.

Joseph Chikva
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Joined: Sat Apr 02, 2011 4:30 am

Post by Joseph Chikva »

parallel wrote:Reading the various theories put forward to explain the E-Cat makes me think nobody understands how that works either.
Yes, before disclosure.
But one thing is doubtless. At least for me.
I heard about self-occurring reactions (decay, etc.). But never heard before about nuclear reaction triggered by catalyst with activation limit 20-times lower than eV (~500 Celsius degrees) - much lower than even first ionization limit!
Which ionization - much lower than even Ni melting point!
And by this reason I am sure that there in Rossi's device is not nuclear reaction. Chemical - yes.
I am not a big expert and my claim is on base only of my limited knowledge.

chrismb
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Joined: Sat Dec 13, 2008 6:00 pm

Post by chrismb »

parallel wrote:I add this useless discussion of science as chrismp says that this (not reporting on new data) is the only contribution to this blog that counts./sarc off..
eh? Is that supposed to make some sort of grammatical sense.

Only you keep going on about posts that count. My point was that you've never discussed or expressed an opinion about polywell physics. I've not made any critique on anyone for contributing irrelevantly wrt polywell. The terms of the forums here does not mandate against irrelevant polywell discussions!
I find it aesthetically more pleasing to believe that it probably requires a new theory, not only because I like Carver Meade's theory of electrons being waves rather than particles.
What requires a new theory? Don't you see the problem? It's like coming up with a new theory for how pink goblins fly.

There is nothing scientific in conjouring theories to account for hearsay events, and so there should be no pretence here that it is a 'physics' topic of any relevance to polywell.

I would find it aesthetically more pleasing if you stop inventing things to draw associations between them.

parallel
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Location: Philadelphia, PA

Post by parallel »

chrismb,
You were the one that first brought up the subject of my lack of "contributions" wrt Polywell and suggested a thread on the E-Cat shouldn't even be allowed. Not that anything will change your solidified mind, I will mention that I met with my Congressman, who being a retired admiral had good connections with the navy, to persuade him to do what he could to ensure further research money for that project. (Edit added. He hadn't heard of it before.) That probably did more to help EMC2's progress than your thousands of blog posts.

What you write again demonstrates the difficulty you have with either reading or comprehension.
You don't think challenging the Heisenberg uncertainty principle worth mentioning compared with trying to prove you were right about nothing of importance.

Others, who might be interested in wave theory, check out the these links:

Applications of the Wave Structure of Matter
http://www.quantummatter.com/_Media/_Ap ... he_WSM.pdf

Schrodinger's Universe, pp 150-159 (2008) by Milo Wolff
Chapter 13 - Mathematics of Electron Spin
http://wsminfo.org/articles/spin-qed.htm

The Wave Structure of the Electric Field by Michael Harney
http://vixra.org/pdf/1004.0073v1.pdf
Erwin Schrödinger, author of the famous Schrödinger equation, felt that his wave equation which governs most of quantum mechanics, described an actual wave in space when he stated, "What we observe as material bodies and forces are nothing but shapes and variations in the structure of space. Particles are just schaumkommen (appearances).”

chrismb
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Joined: Sat Dec 13, 2008 6:00 pm

Post by chrismb »

parallel wrote:chrismb,
You were the one that first brought up the subject of my lack of "contributions" wrt Polywell
yes... still the case...and...?
and suggested a thread on the E-Cat shouldn't even be allowed.
I've never said that. Don't go all non-sequitur-y in me all over again, now.
Not that anything will change your solidified mind
Change it for what, for ** sake!?
I will mention that I met with my Congressman, who being a retired admiral had good connections with the navy, to persuade him to do what he could to ensure further research money for that project. That probably did more to help EMC2's progress than your thousands of blog posts.
So THE CRAP WHAT!?!

How does this relate to YOU NOT CONTRIBUTING ANY DISCUSSIONS ON POLYWELL PHYSICS!!

I don't care if you 'phoned up POTUS, the POPE and the Secretary General of the Arab League in a single, teleconf and got them to agree a secret $50 trillion budget for polywell, all because you know each one personally since school days - IT'S STILL adds up to you making S*D ALL effort to discuss physics that relates to polywell on this forum!!!

Do you just not understand what 'non-sequitur' means!?!?

Joseph Chikva
Posts: 2039
Joined: Sat Apr 02, 2011 4:30 am

Post by Joseph Chikva »

parallel wrote:Others, who might be interested in wave theory, check out the these links:

Applications of the Wave Structure of Matter
http://www.quantummatter.com/_Media/_Ap ... he_WSM.pdf

Schrodinger's Universe, pp 150-159 (2008) by Milo Wolff
Chapter 13 - Mathematics of Electron Spin
http://wsminfo.org/articles/spin-qed.htm

The Wave Structure of the Electric Field by Michael Harney
http://vixra.org/pdf/1004.0073v1.pdf
Erwin Schrödinger, author of the famous Schrödinger equation, felt that his wave equation which governs most of quantum mechanics, described an actual wave in space when he stated, "What we observe as material bodies and forces are nothing but shapes and variations in the structure of space. Particles are just schaumkommen (appearances).”
And how Schrödinger's works corresponds to Rossi's device?
Why not Leonardo da Vinci? :)

Axil
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Joined: Fri Jan 02, 2009 6:34 am

Post by Axil »

Joseph Chikva wrote:
parallel wrote:Reading the various theories put forward to explain the E-Cat makes me think nobody understands how that works either.
Yes, before disclosure.
But one thing is doubtless. At least for me.
I heard about self-occurring reactions (decay, etc.). But never heard before about nuclear reaction triggered by catalyst with activation limit 20-times lower than eV (~500 Celsius degrees) - much lower than even first ionization limit!
Which ionization - much lower than even Ni melting point!
And by this reason I am sure that there in Rossi's device is not nuclear reaction. Chemical - yes.
I am not a big expert and my claim is on base only of my limited knowledge.
And by this reason I am sure that there in Rossi's device is not nuclear reaction. Chemical - yes.

Any process that produces transmutation of elements is by definition a nuclear process. According to authoritative, objective, and reliable reports, the Rossi reactor produces nuclear transmutation of elements, and is therefore by definition nuclear in operation.

chrismb
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Joined: Sat Dec 13, 2008 6:00 pm

Post by chrismb »

Axil wrote:According to authoritative, objective, and reliable reports, the Rossi reactor produces nuclear transmutation of elements
Thanks for the definition of 'nuclear'. How about giving us some for your understanding of 'authoritative', objective' and 'reliable'?

parallel
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Location: Philadelphia, PA

Post by parallel »

Joseph Chikva,
And how Schrödinger's works corresponds to Rossi's device?
Why not Leonardo da Vinci?
The E-Cat may just possibly work by some nuclear reaction, that some claim is described by QM. Bright though he was, I doubt Leonardo knew about such things :wink:

Seriously though, if the standard model has troubles explaining LENR, it is just possible that wave theory might do it better. I won't attempt to persuade anyone of that though.

chrismb
Posts: 3161
Joined: Sat Dec 13, 2008 6:00 pm

Post by chrismb »

parallel wrote:Seriously though, if the standard model has troubles explaining LENR, it is just possible that wave theory might do it better.
LENR has not been scientifically demonstrated and SM has no scientific explanation for why it would.

So SM seems to have no problems explaining LENR at all, at the moment.

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