In the mid to late 1990s few in LENR were as prolific as Yasuhiro Iwamura
and associates. This was due to good financial support from Mitsubishi and
positive results. Below are a few of the dozens of papers he and his
associates published, using the very best equipment. Many papers are found
in the LENR-CANR library. Iwamura was ever so close to becoming the great
hero of LENR - but pieces of the puzzle went missing, and today he is too
often overlooked despite an enormous contribution. 

 

In scouring the library for evidence of dark matter in LENR, which was
reported in data but not appreciated at the time, here is one paper with
information which supports the dark matter signature at ~3.6 keV. There are
others.

 

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

 

Look at Fig. 4. "Long-term X-ray Emission and its energy spectrum" Notice
the steepness of the spectrum below ~10 keV and the exponential increase in
counts  The energy spectrum shown here represents about a week of run-time.

 

This can be interpreted as evidence of dark matter formation, but the
authors had no appreciation at the time, that cosmological data would turn
up which indicates the prevalence of that soft x-ray signal in the Universe
and also relate to dense hydrogen. The extreme peak of x-ray counts at low
keV is provocative but not proof. This bit of history is mentioned in the
context of a proposed dark matter reaction for thermal gain in LENR, which
is bolstered by findings from Iwamura, together with a fusion "side effect".


 

Basically the conjecture is supported by dark matter formation followed by a
secondary nuclear reaction, where most of the thermal gain (~90%) comes from
formation of DDL, and thereafter some of the DDL fuses. The overall reaction
involves fusion, but most of the heat comes from deuterium densification.
This hypothesis is falsifiable.

 

Small amount of deuterium fusion with oxygen could happen, when heavy water
is the feedstock for DDL since oxygen is also a Rydberg catalyst.  From
other papers of Iwamura - we see that this kind of fusion does NOT go to
helium, but involves the fluorine reaction, which is not widely appreciated
as a typical LENR transitory product . unless you appreciate why a
water-based DDL molecule would favor the O-> F-> O reaction where oxygen
goes to fluorine and then back to oxygen (O18 isotope) quickly. Half-life is
short.

 

Mass of 16O is 15.995 amu. Mass of 18F is 18.0001. Mass of 18O is 17.999.
Net difference of O isotopes is 2.004. Deuterium mass is 2.014 but if the
reaction happens with DDL deuterium, then net gain is  lower, and this
explains the lack of gammas. A positron emission takes the fluorine back to
O18.

 

There are plenty of x-rays here, but not high energy. No helium is seen.
Fluorine is seen (and in other papers of Iwamura) but disappears (half-life
is 90 minutes) Figure 4 suggest that most of the signal comes from the soft
end of the spectrum, and much of the rest looks like bremsstrahlung - which
is consistent with positron annihilation. (decay product of fluorine)

 

Without all of these factors - the signal of DDL(dense deuterium), the
appearance and then disappearance of fluorine, and the lack of residual
radiation - nothing else makes sense - so it is easy to overlook. The one
factor which will prove or disprove the hypothesis is the ratio of 16O to
18O. That would seal the deal - if the reaction begins with oxygen-16 and
ends with oxygen-18, and the proof is that the natural ratio will  change. 

 

The reason Iwamura enters the picture is that he was the first to detect
fluorine and x-rays in the proper spectrum along with excess heat and NO
helium, yet using the highest quality laboratory and team. 

 

In fact, considering this transitory reaction's (O-F-O) short half-life
(less than 2 hours for 18F before it reverts to 18O) we can now appreciate
that Iwamura actually detected massive amounts of fluorine in total - but
never realized how much, since he was not fully taking into account the
short half-life. 

 

Iwamura, Y., Itoh, K., Toyoda, I., "Observation of Anomalous Nuclear Effects
in D2-Pd System", 1ccf4 pp.160-164

Itoh, T., Iwamura, Y., Gotoh, N., and Toyoda, I., "Observation of Nuclear
products under

vacuum condition from deuterated palladium and High Loading ratio", 1ccf 5,
pp 189-196.

Iwamura, Y. et al iccf6, (1996) p 274

Iwamura, Y. et. al., "Detection of anomalous elements, x-ray, and excess
heat in a D2-Pd

system and its interpretation by the electron-induced nuclear reaction
model", Fusion

Technology, 33, (1998) p. 476

Iwamura, Y. et al, "Detection of Anomalous Elements, X-Ray and Excess Heat
Induced by

Continuous Diffusion of Deuterium through Multi-Layer Cathode (Pd/Cao/Pd),
Proc. 7th Int. Conf.

on Cold Fusion, April 19-24, 1998, Ed., Jaeger, F., Published by Eneco Inc.,
Salt lake City, Utah,

USA (1998) pp 167-172

Reply via email to