A key date for LENR, possibly the most important date since 1989, could be
the 15th Japan Cold Fusion Research Conference in Sapporo, Japan on Nov.
1-2, 2014 where Yoshino and Mizuno will present detailed results of the
kilowatt reactor upgrade.

They will also present nuclear data which may explain the lack of helium (or
alternatively why they made a mistake and missed helium in the first
presentation) and the increase in mass-2 species, both of which have been
presented at MIT in what may be the most important experiment in the field -
since the first one. The MIT experiment, in terms of thermal gain per unit
of time, was 600% more robust than the next best experiment in the history
of cold fusion (Roulette/Pons) which itself was at least double the third
best.

What is special about nickel with deuterium? Somehow, the switch to nickel
from palladium has allowed Mizuno to leapfrog everyone for the past 25 years
of experiment, and without need for fusion of deuterium to helium. If it is
shown that deuterium reactions in nickel do not yield helium, yet in
palladium, there is helium- then there is an obvious but painful conclusion.
Unfortunately, it is not the conclusion that many observers want to see,
since it will suggest that helium is an alpha decay product of palladium and
not a product of fusion. In fact, the pathway to rhodium, via alpha decay
stands out. Here is Gene Mallove's famous article about the 5 isotopes of
rhodium which showed up in 1992.

http://www.lenr-canr.org/acrobat/MalloveEalchemynig.pdf

Notably the appearance of rare Rhodium indicates that the helium seen in
LENR could derive from alpha decay of Pd, which can happen in numerous ways
via deuteron interaction. There is a backstory to the Kevin Wolf story,
which is why many in the field do not agree with Mallove's suggestion that
helium could be coming from the alpha decay of Pd -> Rh. This route does
have the distinct advantage of no expected gamma.

At any rate, deuterium in Nickel does not yield helium, apparently from the
charts in Mizuno's paper - yet it may produce robust excess heat in some
other modality involving deuteron manipulation. One clue is that Ni is one
of only two elements in the entire periodic table whose atomic weight is
less than the preceding element (lower z). In this case the preceding
element is cobalt (element 27) which is heavier on average. Nickel-58 is to
blame, as it is "too light" for its place.

Atomic weight is found by taking the atomic mass of each isotope and
averaging to natural abundance. The reason for the drop in atomic weight in
Nickel overall (compared to Cobalt which precedes it) is due to the
distribution of isotopes: nickel-58 (68%) nickel-60 (26%), nickel-61 (1%),
nickel-62 (4%), nickel-64 (1%). Because the largest contributor to the
atomic weight of nickel is the Nickel-58 isotope, which is lighter than
Cobalt-59 (100% of natural), the overall atomic weight average comes out
"light" despite nickel having the extra proton. In terms of what we expect
to see, if everything were to be predictable - most nickel "should be" Ni-60
- but that is not the case. This is not quite a singularity, but the only
other place that it occurs in nature is with tellurium and iodine. Of the
two cases, the first (Ni/Co) occurs in two ferromagnetic species, which
could be important, especially since the copper isotope Cu-60 has such a
short half-life (minutes).

The combined importance of all of these factoids - is through some kind of
magnetic enhanced route, which is the essence of the Letts/Cravens effect,
along with the fact that Ni-58 is the most "relatively receptive" element in
the periodic table for the addition of nuclear mass, due to its inherent
"lightness" on relative stepwise scale. IOW - if it turns out the hydrogen
or deuterium do in fact have one or more redundant ground states, and even
if the reduced orbital is not stable over time, then there will exist the
ability of the altered near-field of hydrogen and its ultra-strong magnetic
susceptibility as an atomic species (and altered statistics of charge
placement in the case of deuterium) to assist in overcoming normal Coulomb
repulsion wrt other nuclei. 

As for predictions about November and Mizuno's show-and-tell: Mine is that
the mass-2 species will be attributed to atomic deuterium, but as a stable
monatomic isomer. And secondly, that there will a relative increase in the
Ni-60 isotope. Both of these outcomes can be further expounded on later.

Jones

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