Yes no problem.

 

From: Peter Gluck 

Subject: Re: [Vo]:A hybrid Holmlid-Hot-Cat experiment

 

Dear Jones,

 

would you agree to publish this idea on EGO OUT? I will give the link to Vo 
anyway- I like the idea.

Peter

 

On Fri, Oct 30, 2015 at 7:37 PM, Jones Beene wrote:

There are a few possible ways in which the findings and the techniques used to 
make dense deuterium for Holmlid could find a direct and easy applicability in 
a glow-tube type of experiment – using the same type of alumina tube (or 
mullite) used by Parkhomov. 

To be safe, this kind of hybrid should be done without a laser, using as a 
substitute, a monochromatic light source. As for the fuel - I agree with Robin 
that deuterium probably works better – after all, the nucleus is bosonic and 
the proton is not, but Holmlid clearly indicates that either will densify. 
Monatomic H, in contrast to the proton - is an atomic boson, so maybe that is 
the feature which lets either isotope work. 

This hybrid version will be a two stage system – an activation stage and a 
conversion stage. Both will use only photonic energy input, NO resistance wire, 
which is a big departure from Parkhomov. There is no resistance heater to burn 
out and the net gain should improve due to efficiency of SPP formation. Both of 
the stages can be referred to as “mini-tanning-booths”. J

The underlying concept is premised on SPP formation, both in the activation 
stage and in the conversion stage. This requires a light source and a magnetic 
field to optimize. The further assumption is that the laser is effective for 
both Holmlid and Letts/Cravens because it is coherent light, but that 
monochromatic photons will also work. The magnetic field does not need to be 
strong, and can be provided by loudspeaker magnets placed outside the hot zone.

Holmlid is apparently seeing large amounts nucleon disintegration – which we 
definitely need to avoid in a kilowatt level systems due to gamma radiation; 
and therefore, it would be better to avoid the laser in favor of monochromatic 
light. As fate would have it, there is an ideal light emitter device in the 
sodium vapor lamp, which is the small version of the common street lamp. It is 
the most efficient photon source known – better than the best LEDs and single 
frequency. 

Sodium is naturally monochromatic at 580 nm, and not only that, mass production 
has brought the cost of the bulbs way down - such that the 400 watt bulbs are 
particularly cheap (this is apparently due to the widespread hydroponic farming 
of a certain cash crop). Anyway, an efficient light source makes much more 
sense than powering a ceramic tube with resistance heaters, since it is the 
incandescence (photons) which you need for SPP – and not the heat, per se. 

Obviously, one must buy into the SPP hypothesis for the operative modality 
before any of this makes sense. But once you do buy into it – the absurdity of 
using resistance heat to get surface plasmons is obvious. It is a no brainer to 
start with photons, not electricity.

400 Watts should be an ideal size for the conversion stage but the activation 
stage could best use a lamp in the range of 75 watts. The activation stage will 
last for an extended time frame – say 100 hours of continuous irradiation of 
the fuel-tube. This can be done safely with a lamp. The alumina or mullite 
tubes being used are translucent, and will downshift the 580 nm yellow light of 
the sodium bulb down to IR – which is ideal for SPP. Once activated, the fuel 
is not removed from the tube – instead the same ceramic tube is used in the 
conversion stage, as is. The conversion stage looks the same but has a larger 
lamp for input triggering.

The fuel mix which would work best, according to Holmlid would be mostly Shell 
105 catalyst. The rest of the fuel mix could include LAH as the hydrogen 
source, and nickel powder. The idea is that two reflective and insulated 
mirrored troughs are fabricated from aluminum foil or equivalent, such that the 
loaded ceramic tube is irradiated all around by monochromatic light and also 
heated to a modest level where hydrogen pressure is minimal. Some insulation 
will be required. Magnets are outside the “tanning booth” so they can be kept 
cool, but the net effect is that SPP should form more readily than with 
Parkhomov – and over time, a population of dense hydrogen will accumulate. This 
activate fuel will be converted in the adjoining “booth” (actually bulbs could 
be swapped out in the same booth).

Once activated, the fuel tube needs only the addition of thermocouples before 
it is ready to be irradiated (at a much higher level) in the conversion stage, 
where the monochromatic  trigger, from the sodium vapor light is 3-6 times more 
intense than in the activation stage.

If the SPP theory/modality is correct, and if the Holmlid dense hydrogen 
modality is also involved, then the end result is that the COP of this system 
should be higher than the Parkhomov system, where incandescence provides the 
photons at perhaps 3-5 % efficiency. Sodium is a factor of 10x more efficient 
for photons.

Jones





 

-- 

Dr. Peter Gluck

Cluj, Romania

http://egooutpeters.blogspot.com

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