10KW LENR Demonstrator?

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

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parallel
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Post by parallel »

parallel wrote: ...and suggested a thread on the E-Cat shouldn't even be allowed.
chrismb replied: I've never said that. Don't go all non-sequitur-y in me all over again, now.
chrismb previously wrote: Why this forum tolerates people whose only purpose here is to talk about COLD FUSION B*LL*CKS is just one of those things I guess I will never learn.
:roll: Obviously you have a very open mind concerning Rossi.

Earlier you said the reason you debated Polywell was to help you develop your own machine. How is that going?
Sorry I didn't understand that I was supposed to post to help you out. :wink:

chrismb
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Post by chrismb »

parallel wrote:
parallel wrote: ...and suggested a thread on the E-Cat shouldn't even be allowed.
chrismb replied: I've never said that. Don't go all non-sequitur-y in me all over again, now.
chrismb previously wrote: Why this forum tolerates people whose only purpose here is to talk about COLD FUSION B*LL*CKS is just one of those things I guess I will never learn.
:roll: Obviously you have a very open mind concerning Rossi.
These two things are not inclusive. Only in your own closed analysis do they appear so.

I fully understand why those who have intelligently, previously, debated polywell on this forum would look at other 'claims of fusion'. So my comment above stands, and it appears only you do not understand the meaning of the words "whose only purpose here is to talk about COLD FUSION B*LL*CKS "

Joseph Chikva
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Post by Joseph Chikva »

Axil wrote: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.
Nature of that "transmutation" is not clear. And that's your right to believe those "authoritative, objective, and reliable reports".
Who researched? Past researches of those people?
By my opinion as "authoritative, objective, and reliable" may be concidered publications in PhysRev or in similar by level journals.

D Tibbets
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Post by D Tibbets »

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...
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.
The graphs of quantum tunneling I have seen are not bell shaped curves. The coulomb repulsion graphs are square, the tunneling are curved to a peak then stable. Other nuclear reactions may lead to a decline, not the coulomb barrior aspect.
Considering a nuclear fusion collision as elastic is confusing for me. Most Coulomb collisions are perhaps elastic, but if a collision results in fusion, there is interaction, and the binding energy of the nucleus goes up. a lot or a modest amount depending how heavy the final nucleus is. As the nucleon (proton) approaches the nucleus id is decellerated by the repulsive electrial force. This could be considered a loss of energy from the protons or nuclei standpoint. I can see it as being elastic from a COM standpoint. But, this completely negates the kinetic energy needed to overcome the coulomb repulsion. Instead of using a 200KeV proton aimed at a stationary B11 to yield a 8.7 MeV fusion reaction, you would essentially have a 8.9 MeV fusion reaction since the the kinetic energy of the proton would be conserved. The energy of the reaction is represented by the KE pf the products, and any radiation that may be emmited.
This results in total energy always increasing with fusion , irregardless whether the input KE of the proton is 1000KeV or 20,000 KeV. This reintroduces the argument that if this was the situation, then stars would continue to burn past fe/Ni. The universe would be a very different place. It also, I think, precludes the possibility of heavy nuclei fission releasing energy. The two opposite processes in the same nucleus cannot both produce energy without violating conservation of energy(?). In this case you could have a perpetual free energy machine, merely by oscillating back and forth between two isotopes.

If I have to abandon my KE of the input nucleon as reaching and exceeding the energy of the nuclear binding energy for the reaction meaning that the net reaction is endothermic, then my previous arguments must be reinstated, unless you can otherwise explain to me how the universe could exist, or at least how both fission and fusion can be exothermic with the same reactants and products. If you illustrate a reaction with arrows going both ways. The reactants must have more energy than the products, visa versa, or the energy balance is zero. You cannot have more energy on both sides of the equation. This is essentially what your interpretation of the Nuclear Binding Energy graph is saying if you ignore the turning point (where the slope of the graph reverses at Ni62).



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

qfman
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What drives the reaction

Post by qfman »

The paper / Hypothesis available at the links below stays within the current (2011) standard model of physics. This is not a single step reaction and involves several steps that require some knowledge in several different disciplines. The first link provides the background nessessary. I strongly recommend LISTENing to the power point at
http://www.brillouinenergy.com/BE25Tec.PPS at least once before reading the full hypothesis at
http://www.brillouinenergy.com/Brilloui ... thesis.pdf

Joseph Chikva
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Re: What drives the reaction

Post by Joseph Chikva »

qfman wrote:The paper / Hypothesis available at the links below stays within the current (2011) standard model of physics. This is not a single step reaction and involves several steps that require some knowledge in several different disciplines. The first link provides the background nessessary. I strongly recommend LISTENing to the power point at
http://www.brillouinenergy.com/BE25Tec.PPS at least once before reading the full hypothesis at
http://www.brillouinenergy.com/Brilloui ... thesis.pdf
So that is hypothesis that propagating the current through metal hydride (palladium wire or nickel nanopowder in hydrogen atmosphere) we can execute nuclear reaction?
Or in the other words brillouin zones in crystal lattice provide opportunity to nuclei to react? Is that proved and known fact?

Giorgio
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Post by Giorgio »

Axil wrote:According to authoritative, objective, and reliable reports, the Rossi reactor produces nuclear transmutation of elements, and is therefore by definition nuclear in operation.
We have already agreed that there is no objective nor reliable reports on the issue, as the only source is still Rossi and no one else. Is useless and counterproductive to keep saying something that is easily demonstrable as untrue.

I would like to discuss facts instead of beliefs once in a while.

Skipjack
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Post by Skipjack »

We have already agreed that there is no objective nor reliable reports on the issue, as the only source is still Rossi and no one else.
Agreed

rcain
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Post by rcain »

Giorgio wrote:...We have already agreed that there is no objective nor reliable reports on the issue, as the only source is still Rossi and no one else. ...
although to be fair, there is the work of George Miley and several others similarly reporting some form of 'apparent' transmutation going on, not to mention earlier work of Pianteli and Focardi himself.

i have already aired my views on Rossi's 'method' and i am no apologist. But he has brought to light a rump of work that requires further evaluation; other reputable minds seem to agree with that at least.

MSimon
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Post by MSimon »

rcain wrote:
Giorgio wrote:...We have already agreed that there is no objective nor reliable reports on the issue, as the only source is still Rossi and no one else. ...
although to be fair, there is the work of George Miley and several others similarly reporting some form of 'apparent' transmutation going on, not to mention earlier work of Pianteli and Focardi himself.

i have already aired my views on Rossi's 'method' and i am no apologist. But he has brought to light a rump of work that requires further evaluation; other reputable minds seem to agree with that at least.
There is one difficulty. The reports all conflict - helium? yes? no? gammas? yes? no? transmutation? yes? no? Every report is different.

I do trust Miley. But what was he measuring? Evidently not what others were measuring.
Engineering is the art of making what you want from what you can get at a profit.

KitemanSA
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Post by KitemanSA »

MSimon wrote: There is one difficulty. The reports all conflict - helium? yes? no? gammas? yes? no? transmutation? yes? no? Every report is different.
This may just suggest that there are a number of DIFFERENT phenomena that are being studied. Some may be investigating a low probablility D-D fusion while others are studying p-Ni transmutation. There are a number of different groups, each potentially demonstrating some distinct LENR. What fun!

MSimon
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Post by MSimon »

KitemanSA wrote:
MSimon wrote: There is one difficulty. The reports all conflict - helium? yes? no? gammas? yes? no? transmutation? yes? no? Every report is different.
This may just suggest that there are a number of DIFFERENT phenomena that are being studied. Some may be investigating a low probablility D-D fusion while others are studying p-Ni transmutation. There are a number of different groups, each potentially demonstrating some distinct LENR. What fun!
And this may suggest that the folks doing the talking have no idea.....

Well any way, what we have so far is nothing and a fair number of people with great faith in it. Touching to be sure.
Engineering is the art of making what you want from what you can get at a profit.

Joseph Chikva
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Post by Joseph Chikva »

MSimon wrote:And this may suggest that the folks doing the talking have no idea.....
Yes, I think the same.

I have read that article.
The following six concepts work together in driving the electron capture process.
1. Phonons
2. Molecular Hamiltonian
3. Non bonding energy
4. Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle / confinement energy.
5. Electron orbital probability functions
6. Electromigration
Before I thought that Hamiltonian is only operator helping to describe something.
They only wrote that and as I have seen never used then.
But "Hamiltonian is a concept driving the process".
That's very new for me.

Axil
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Re: What drives the reaction

Post by Axil »

qfman wrote:The paper / Hypothesis available at the links below stays within the current (2011) standard model of physics. This is not a single step reaction and involves several steps that require some knowledge in several different disciplines. The first link provides the background nessessary. I strongly recommend LISTENing to the power point at
http://www.brillouinenergy.com/BE25Tec.PPS at least once before reading the full hypothesis at
http://www.brillouinenergy.com/Brilloui ... thesis.pdf
IMHO, Brillouin theory is generally correct in describing the Rossi process, but wrong in its particulars.

This theory is Deuterium-Palladium based and in detail is not directly applicable to the Rossi reactor since The Rossi reaction is H-Ni based. However, the general scope of the many phenomena described is applicable.

For example based on the history of the development of Rossi’s reactor, I strongly suspect that the Rossi reaction is based on the catalytic action of carbon. This would suggest the generation of negative ions of Rydberg matter as the coherent hydrogen feedstock of the reaction. However, the Brillouin theory suggests a positive ion mechanism based on a spill over catalyst.

IMHO, The “Heisenberg Confinement Energy” compresses hydrogen as Rydberg matter to the state of fusion where reverse beta decay produces neutrons as light elements form from the fusion of many hydrogen atoms.

I don’t believe that Rossi has figured out how his process works.

Brillouin Energy Corp should make an effort to adjust their theory to the Rossi reaction. As the lowest cost cold fusion solution, the Rossi reaction is commercially superior to the D-Pd reaction.

Rossi has effectivly killed the D-Pd reaction.

chrismb
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Re: What drives the reaction

Post by chrismb »

Axil wrote:Rossi has effectivly killed the D-Pd reaction.
(It had life!?)

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