Re: [Vo]: Rossi/Parkhomov reaction and the hydrogen anion

2015-03-04 Thread Bob Cook
work better. A ductile metal might be better for example. Bob - Original Message - From: Bob Higgins To: vortex-l@eskimo.com Sent: Wednesday, March 04, 2015 6:43 AM Subject: Re: [Vo]: Rossi/Parkhomov reaction and the hydrogen anion We are all grateful to Ed Storms and Kiva

Re: [Vo]: Rossi/Parkhomov reaction and the hydrogen anion

2015-03-04 Thread Bob Higgins
We are all grateful to Ed Storms and Kiva Labs for analyzing the sintered Ni ash of the MFMP Bang! experiment. Those images are from the sintered Ni, molded int o a rod by the ID of the reaction tube. There is woefully insufficient evidence that the Bang! experiment produced any LENR. However,

Re: [Vo]: Rossi/Parkhomov reaction and the hydrogen anion

2015-03-03 Thread Eric Walker
On Tue, Mar 3, 2015 at 6:30 AM, Bob Higgins rj.bob.higg...@gmail.com wrote: Since the SEM images of the fuel https://drive.google.com/folderview?id=0B5Pc25a4cOM2fllFSWpFNVJoUlIxbERhRTE2M2FTY0s3TU9sZ2FsVG5wMGdodlE2ZW1JMVEusp=sharing Thank you, Bob. (And thanks to Ed Storms.) Am I correct in

[Vo]: Rossi/Parkhomov reaction and the hydrogen anion

2015-03-03 Thread Bob Higgins
One of the final decomposition products in the fuel bearing LiAlH4 is LiH. LiH decomposes in the 900-1000ÂșC range to Li metal and hydrogen. Note that LiH is an *ionic hydride*. That means that the hydrogen has more or less permanently grabbed an electron from the Li, making it an H- anion inside