RE: [Vo]:Right-on AGPJones--

To show my ignorance, what's a Gibbs energy vector?  Can it point into negative 
energy?  Zero point?  I am not sure of all your inferences.

Bob
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Jones Beene 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Tuesday, January 06, 2015 7:44 AM
  Subject: RE: [Vo]:Right-on AGP


  A side note which should be mentioned re: Mark’s listing of citations, given 
the extreme energetics of lithium hydride… is whether we are looking at a 
subset of violation of parity. Or maybe it is the superset.

  A “near miracle” explanation for the Parkhomov anomaly can be called 
“asymmetric chemistry.” It involves a net energy deficit between thermal 
decomposition compared to the heat of formation. There could exist a small gap 
which then is cumulative via a serial process for net gain. Except for the Lamb 
shift, this kind of asymmetry is almost unknown in physics. The ultimate source 
of gain would be zero point.

  The alternative “miracle explanation” for gain, of course … is nuclear 
fusion, in the guise of LENR. BUT… if we want to talk about “conservation of 
miracles” the nuclear explanation requires 3 miracles to explain the Parkhomov 
effect.

  1)      Overcoming the coulomb barrier

  2)      Complete avoidance of gamma rays or bremsstrahlung

  3)      Complete avoidance of radioactive ash 


  While Gibbs asymmetry, as we can call it - requires something less than a 
miracle, since it is hinted at already. Until 1947, physics assumed that all 
forces of nature were completely symmetric and did not distinguish between 
right and left, image and mirror-image or between Gibbs energy vectors. The 
discovery of violation of parity in 1956 was more than a sensation, it was a 
shocker since it went beyond QM: as the Lamb shift a decade earlier was both 
minimal and quantum. Both imply that the universe displays handedness, or 
chirality, and this is fundamentally asymmetric. “Enantioselective catalysis” 
took that a step further into thermodynamics … and now hydride chemistry could 
change everything that we assume about the necessity of symmetry in nature… and 
at high probability.


  From: Mark Jurich 


  [4] The Thermal Decomposition of Lithium Aluminum Hydride, Block & Gray (1964)

        http://pubs.acs.org/doi/pdf/10.1021/ic50025a009

        Page 1 –> 
http://pubs.acs.org/appl/literatum/publisher/achs/journals/content/inocaj/1965/inocaj.1965.4.issue-3/ic50025a009/production/ic50025a009.fp.png_v03

        Page 2 –> http://www.tempid.altervista.org/Page2.png

    

  Here are my references, in chronological order:



  [1] The thermal decomposition of lithium aluminum hydride, Garner & Haycock 
(1951)

        
http://rspa.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/royprsa/211/1106/335.full.pdf



  [2] PRELIMINARY INVESTIGATION OF LITHIUM HYDRIDE AS A HIGH-TEMPERATURE 
INTERNAL COOLANT, Modisette (1957)

        http://naca.central.cranfield.ac.uk/reports/1957/naca-rm-l57f12a.pdf



  [3] INVESTIGATION OF LITHIUM HYDRIDE AND MAGNESIUM AS HIGH-TEMPERATURE 
INTERNAL COOLANTS WITH SEVERAL SKIN MATERIALS, Modisette (1958)

        
http://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc53069/m2/1/high_res_d/19660024045.pdf



  [4] The Thermal Decomposition of Lithium Aluminum Hydride, Block & Gray (1964)

        http://pubs.acs.org/doi/pdf/10.1021/ic50025a009



  [5] Desorption of LiAlH4 with Ti- and V-based additives, Blanchard, Brinks, 
Hauback & Norby (2004)

        http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0921510703005415



  [6] Hydrogen, lithium, and lithium hydride production, US 20130047789 A1 
(2013)

        http://www.google.com/patents/US20130047789



  Notes

  - [1] is the classic paper (1951) everyone seems to refer to.

  - [2] is prelim of [3], with slightly different content, describing the 
reversible LiH decomposition reaction

  - [4] if this isn’t referenced in any paper regarding LiAlH4 Thermal 
Decomposition, the paper is suspect (1964, 2 pages, but unfortunately behind a 
pay wall, maybe if someone searches hard enough, they’ll find it; I’ll look 
after I post this. Has DSC Plots, breaking down the H2 Evolution at various 
temps, but at standard pressures)

  - [5] Behind a pay wall, but what you see on the page is good enough... The 
do NOT reference [4]!

  - [6] Some nice Vapor Pressure curves in here!

  - I also came across this book via the Internet (as well as Axil), but I do 
not have it (looks very useful):

  
http://www.bookmantraa.com/thermophysical-properties-lithium-hydride-deuteride-tritide-their-solutions-with-lithium-book-72683.html






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