Hi Bob:

   Thank you so much for the rather concise/informative update involving the 
Dog Bone Explosion Run.  I have a couple comments and questions to ask and I am 
hoping you know the answers to them or can direct me or this note to someone 
who might know.

The “hoped” (or planned) weight % of Ni Powder in the fuel/charge was indeed 
90%.  My current estimate puts it at slightly above 84%.  I realize that when 
you wrote 90% the implied error is +/- 10%, but I believe we are narrowing in 
to this value.  Of course, this is based on the latest MFMP Information and is 
still subject to review.  We are all anxiously awaiting the next update 
concerning the fuel/charge amount.

Do you know what Alumina Tube Inside Diameter and Wall Thickness is?  I would 
like to verify these values and attempt to determine whether the Hydrogen Gas 
Pressure (or what Hydrogen Gas Pressure) might cause the Alumina Tube to 
fracture.  A link to the Alumina Tube Material Data Sheet would be extremely 
helpful.

If you follow some of the links here at Vortex-L, my current estimate for the 
maximum pressure is 9641 psi +/- at least 10% error.

Do you know what the Outside Diameter of the Sintered Ni Rod was?  I know it 
may have been mentioned before.  I am curious if there was any noticeable gap 
between the rod and the Alumina Wall.

FYI:

Here are the links to the fuel/charge materials used in this experiment, as far 
as I know:

http://www.vale.com/EN/business/mining/nickel/NickelProducts/T255%20-%20Premium.pdf
http://www.sigmaaldrich.com/catalog/product/aldrich/199877

Thanks,
Mark Jurich


From: Bob Higgins 
Sent: Thursday, February 19, 2015 10:35 AM
To: [email protected] 
Subject: [Vo]:Explosion May Be Out of Control LENR

I received the broken shards of the alumina tube from the MFMP Parkhomov-like 
experiment from Ryan Hunt.  The intent was to have analyzed the metal film on 
the inside of the alumina to see if it is Li-Al alloy and to try to re-assemble 
the pieces to form at least one full circumference of the tube.  So far, 
piecing the tube together has been unsuccessful; however, I have found 2 pieces 
each having a large portion of the circumference - in one case 94 degrees of an 
arc and in another 106 degrees.  In both cases, the ID of the alumina tube is 
completely covered with the metal film with no visual evidence at the 
boundaries of the metal tapering in thickness.  Statistically, there is nothing 
to suggest that these pieces were centered on the bottom of the tube.  Also, 
none of the shards show any transition from covered to uncovered with metal. 

Based on this, I surmise that the interior of the tube at 1057C had a complete 
circumferential ring of liquid Li-Al in a thin continuous layer.  It appears 
that the liquid Li-Al wetted to the alumina, perhaps with the hydrogen and high 
temperature cleaning of the alumina surface.  With the wetting, the surface 
tension of the liquid metal, and the high interior pressure, I believe the 
liquid metal was forced to cover the inner circumference of the tube while it 
was liquid.  The chemical effect of the Li on the alumina may also have been 
instrumental in the wetting of the metal solution to the ceramic.  There is no 
supporting evidence for a gravity fed river of liquid Li-Al metal at the bottom 
of the tube.

Visual examination under the microscope shows the supposed Li-Al film to be 
developing small white crystals, well distributed upon its surface.  These are 
probably LiOH from exposure to the humidity in the air.  Alan Goldwater is 
being sent sample shards with the metal coating to do a microscope video of an 
etch in water.  

The Vale T255 Ni, that was 90% by weight of the fuel, sintered into a porous 
rod the shape of the interior of the tube.  After the explosion, the sintered 
rod of Ni was found intact in the remains of the SiC heater.  There is no 
evidence that this Ni was ever bonded or immersed in the Li-Al metal.  Though 
contact was likely, it appears that the molten Li-Al did not wet to the Ni.

The samples will also be examined in the SEM and with XRF.

Bob Higgins


On Thu, Feb 12, 2015 at 5:59 PM, Bob Higgins <[email protected]> wrote:

  I am going to re-assemble the pieces of the reactor tube to determine more 
about the metal film deposited on the inside of the tube.  In one shard, it 
looks to be about 0.0037" in thickness and appears as a cooled, once liquid 
metal.  It is probably a Li-Al alloy.  The liquid Li-Al alloy may form a 
gravity fed river on the bottom of the reactor tube.  Reconstruction of the 
tube will tell us whether this was a gravity fed river or if it was deposited 
around the complete circumference.  Also, we will be having, at minimum, XRF 
done on both the metal on the alumina, and the sintered Ni rod that was left 
after the experiment (in combination with SEM views). 

  Another observation is that there is NO evidence of alumina chemical erosion 
by the Li.  There is no evidence yet that this was not a chemical weakening of 
the tube - it appears to be a simple hot, high pressure failure of the tube.  
This tube was notably thinner than Parkhomov's tube.

  Bob Higgins

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