From: Jed Rothwell 

 

For many years on the fringes of LENR - there has appeared to be this
somewhat nebulous cross-connection between anomalous heat and ultra high
temperature superconductivity. This is more "suspicion" than proof ...

 

This idea has been around for a long time. The reason is not complicated.
Hydrides are low temperature superconductors. People have speculated that
hyper-loaded palladium hydrides might be high temperature superconductors.
The entire cathode is probably not an HTSC, but it might be one over tiny
domains. Cold fusion occurs over tiny domains, so that's all you need.
Loading is not even across the entire cathode. It is much higher in some
spots than others.

 

 

Here is a citation but I have not been able to get hold of the full text.

 

"Possibility of high temperature superconducting phases in PdH". 

Tripodi, P.; Di Gioacchino, D.; Borelli, R.; Vinko, J. D. (May 2003).
Physica C: Superconductivity. 388-389: 571-572. 

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