This is a very good find.  Lots of painstaking work done by the
Lipinski's.  I hope they will correlate heat produced with calculated
output energy in future experiments.  It looks like they calculated output
energy based on particle counts.

On Mon, May 4, 2015 at 11:15 PM, Jones Beene <[email protected]> wrote:

>  *http://unifiedgravity.com/resources/WO2014189799-PAMPH-330-2.pdf*
> <http://unifiedgravity.com/resources/WO2014189799-PAMPH-330-2.pdf>
>
> Ø       Everything is pointing to lithium as the key to LENR – yet
> lithium was there, carefully hidden in plain view, all the way back in 1989.
>
> By this I mean that P&F used lithium electrolyte - yet lithium was almost
> ignored as being active, since everyone thought that D+D fusion was
> occurring - mainly because of the helium ash. This choice was because the
> “textbook” Coulomb barrier seems to be far higher for lithium, so Li was
> essentially discounted. In either case, the ash is helium.
>
> In retrospect - it is plausible that P&F were seeing lithium fusion all
> along, since (Li+D) is favored under certain conditions, according to this
> gravity theory.
>
> That is to say, if Lipinski’s theory is correct, the Coulomb barrier for
> lithium shrinks by a factor of several thousand times (at a resonance
> point); and thus the barrier is far easier to overcome when it is in the
> “sweet spot” which is in the range of 223 eV (compared to two deuterons –
> which barrier is nominally 1.5 MeV).
>
> From the Lipinski patent:
>
> [0080] The amount of energy imparted to the protons as predicted by the 
> inventor's
> gravity theory to create the proton-lithium fusion reaction is surprisingly
> low. The theory predicts that fusion efficiency will be significantly
> increased when a proton that has overcome the Coulomb barrier has energy
> close to 223 e V. The experimental results described later in this
> application verify that by imparting kinetic energy to protons near the
> predicted energy range results in high rates of fusion that produces
> helium ions.
>
> Here is another interesting connection involving nickel, hydrogen and
> lithium… 223 eV is in the range of nickel’s Rydberg redundancy levels -
> which are at IP 5 and 6. Nickel like many transition metals, can be
> hexavalent.
>
> Therefore, it can be imagined that on occasion, f/H is both formed and
> then accelerated by UV photon flux – such as the 299 eV UV photons which
> are emitted by nickel… and from there, it fuses with lithium.
>
> Wow. How sweet it is…
>
>
>
>

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