You've certainly been consistent Jones.  Quoting you from 2011:

[Vo]:Deuterium kills the reaction?

Jones Beene jone...@pacbell.net via eskimo.com

1/19/11
to vortex-l

One detail worth exploring further was the statement from Rossi that
only hydrogen works, and that deuterium kills the reaction !

That is counter-intuitive to say the least. Everyone in hot fusion
knows for an absolute fact that deuterium is the more activenucleus,
right? And everyone in LENR knows that deuterium and palladium work,
whereas H2 is often used as the ‘control’ to show what doesn’t work.
Go figure.

Well, pondering this for a moment, the only possible property that
comes to mind to explain it was posted a few days ago –the “composite
boson” in the context of negative temperature. It is sounding better
and better as a rationale.

To rephrase, the complex argument goes like this. The heat anomaly,
whether it is fusion or not depends on “pycno” or dense hydrogen
clusters. Based on Lawandy’s paper and others, we see that spillover
catalysts operate by splitting molecular hydrogen into atomic hydrogen
without ionization. Dense hydrogen forms from atomic hydrogen if there
are adjoiningdielectric surfaces or cavities. Atomic hydrogen is a
composite boson. If there are internal defects (cavities) for atoms to
accumulate, they somehow seem to densify there without ever going
molecular.

We know that H is a composite boson which is a singularity in nature –
as it is composed of the minimum number of fermions (2) that permit
both states to oscillate back and forth… and furthermore having this
minimum number of quantum states to“align” (statistically) means that
it is exponentially easier to condense than deuterium at so-called
negative temperature (which are not “cold”) especially since spin can
be aligned magnetically...

Thanks to google books, we have access to an old issue of New
Scientist from 1981. On p. 205-6 there is clear indication that we
have known for nearly 30 years that hydrogen condensation can happen
at cryogenic temperatures – i.e. that monatomic hydrogen is a
composite boson independent of the molecular state - which has very
unusual properties as a condensate.

http://books.google.com/books?id=IbbMj56ht8sC&pg=PA205&lpg=PA205&dq=composite-boson+monatomic-hydrogen&source=bl&ots=XlZyp6rE-9&sig=AwMnZv-hCQzTfcbnkN2mQZ65VG0&hl=en&ei=JFwaTab7Oon0tgPSpKjJCg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1&sqi=2&ved=0CBwQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q&f=false

This paper seems to have been largely forgotten, and offers no
indication that “negative temperature” could provide an alternative to
cryogenic temperature. And certainly no indication that the Casimir
cavity can provide a locus for negative temperature.

No one should be blamed at this juncture for being completely
skeptical that negative temperature in a cavity can do this, even on a
temporary time frame; and the only evidence of it today is the
implication from half a dozen papers which indicate that so-called
pycno-hydrogen exists (under many different names, even IRH or Inverse
Rydberg Hydrogen). Rossi’s results are consistent with this modality,
and Holmlid and Miley claim to have evidence of tiny bits of hydrogen
a million times denser than liquid H2.

Are they nuts too? Or is it all fitting together like a jigsaw puzzle?

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