Terry, Dennis,
This makes a lot of sense. Especially since I believe that DGT had
stated that a temperature gradient across the reactor is needed, presumably
to establish hydrogen flow through the active material.
On Sat, Aug 3, 2013 at 2:31 PM, Terry Blanton wrote:
>
>
> On Sat, Aug 3, 2
proceeded down the tube to the tube exit, the speed would be further
reduced if the density increased due to condensation.
On Wed, Jul 31, 2013 at 1:15 PM, Franco Talari wrote:
> Correction: my previous calculation actually assumed a 2 cm diameter (1cm
> radius). Assuming a 1 cm diameter an
Correction: my previous calculation actually assumed a 2 cm diameter (1cm
radius). Assuming a 1 cm diameter and pure steam give a 4 times higher
value (132 m/sec).
On Wed, Jul 31, 2013 at 12:54 PM, Franco Talari wrote:
> Can someone tell me the diameter of the steam exhaust tube? I
Can someone tell me the diameter of the steam exhaust tube? If I assume a
1 cm diameter, along with 18 g/mole of H2O and 1000 g/liter and 1000
cc/liter for water and 0.5 liter/minute input flow, then assuming the ideal
gas law (22.4 liter/mole at STP) as an approximation for steam at
atmospheric
ace of the Ni powders.
Franco Talari
On Tue, Jul 30, 2013 at 11:21 PM, Eric Walker wrote:
> On Tue, Jul 30, 2013 at 8:19 PM, Eric Walker wrote:
>
>>
>>1. p+p -> p+p "reversible" fusion, along the lines of Jones's
>>hypothesis.
>>2. p+e+p
DGT's ICCF17 paper suggests that enrichment is not needed:
"We realized also that Ni58, Ni60, Ni62and Ni64 stable isotopes where
“willing” to participate in a LENR reaction, whilst Ni61 was not. So there
was no need for any costly enrichment method."
Ni58 is 68% of the natural metal while Ni60 is
Jones,
I don't understand how you can call 2 protons (which combine to form
a bosonic quasiparticle) a 'condensate' (transient or otherwise) since
protons are Fermions and only 1 quasiparticle boson is formed from 2
protons. A single boson (pair of protons) is not a condensate. In Kim's
th
A little more searching indicates that the composition of nickel rutile
yellow is: (Ti_0.85 Sb_0.10 Ni_0.05)O_2, so I doubt that this is the rutile
nickel you are searching for. Still perhaps this gives a clue...
On Tue, Aug 14, 2012 at 2:04 PM, Franco Talari wrote:
> Try googling &quo
Try googling "nickel rutile pigments". You should see a link to a product
called HEUCODUR made by HEUBACH. It appears that these are yellow
pigments/paints made with 0.1 micron sized 'nickel rutile particles' with
'molecular formula":(Ni,Sb,Ti)O2 which I interpret as an oxide of an
alloy of Ni
.
They said they did no isotope analysis, yet they said there was no
transmutation of Ni. I don't know how could they conclude that.
.
In the paper they clearly state, and I quote:
"W
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