Since Energetics Technologies (featured on 2009 "60 Minutes" tv-show) uses ultrasound -
"Ultrasonically-excited electrolysis Experiments at Energetics Technologies" http://lenr-canr.org/acrobat/DardikIultrasonic.pdf - is it possible that their wideband ultrasound is really inducing cavitation fusion on the electrode surfaces? Axil Axil wrote: > I wonder if sonoluminescence could be used as a cheap way to produce the > Rossi reaction. I believe that Rydberg hydrogen is produced by the extreme > high pressures occurring during cavatation. The intense ultraviolet > radiation coming at or very near the end of bubble collapse is a clue that > highly excited hydrogen gas is being generated. Any excited dirty plasma > hydrogen will produce Rydberg atoms. > > If a large bubble can enclose a micro sized nickel particle, a Rossi type > reaction might be produced. > Cavatation is extremely powerful. It can produce 5 nanometer diamonds from > graphite feedstock in a few nanoseconds. > > The nickel powder might be easily destroyed inside the collapsing > cavitation bubble. > > Some fluid other than water might be better used to get rid of the oxygen; > maybe a hydrocarbon. > > But such an experiment is easily done; just add some nickel powder of > various sizes, start cavitation, and look for excess heat. > > Regards: Axil > > > > > > > > > On Mon, Feb 6, 2012 at 11:16 PM, Jones Beene <jone...@pacbell.net> wrote: > >> From: Patrick Ellul >> >> * Came across this article and I thought it might be of some >> interest >> to this forum. >> >> >> http://au.ibtimes.com/articles/294046/20120207/acoustic-fusion-potentially-g >> green-inexpensive-virtually-inexhaustible.htm >> >> >> This is fairly well-known group to many of us. Ross Tessien was formerly >> the >> head of Impulse Devices, and a poster on this forum many years ago. I do >> not >> know why he left the company - as seems to be the case. Here is his >> patent. >> >> http://www.freepatentsonline.com/7510321.html >> >> They have had a prototype device on the market for some time IIRC but >> seemed >> to be moving to sonochemistry instead of fusion. >> >> http://www.impulsedevices.com/ >> >> >