At 11:58 PM 10/28/2002 -0800, Sean R. Lynch wrote:
On Mon, 2002-10-28 at 22:12, Pierce Nichols wrote:
> At 10:19 PM 10/28/2002 -0800, David Weinshenker wrote:
> >Pierce Nichols wrote:
> > > The actual working catalyst should be a ceramic
> > > composed of the best catalysts found in the search.
> >
> >Pressed into pellets and fired at high temperature, no doubt... :)
>
>
>          Something like that :P.

Which brings us back to the whole point of my proposal, which was to
avoid trying to make complex catalysts. What we're basically talking
about doing is following the Bollinger process to make a catalyst. And
we've seen how well that has worked so far. So back to electrically
heating a catalyst: we know platinum will probably work this way, does
anyone know something cheaper that's likely to work in a similar
fashion?

See my original idea, and delete the idea of making a compound catalyst. Catalogue oxide/base metal pairs with attractive properties, make samples, and test them.

-p


Mars or Bust!
www.marssociety.com

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