I would not want to get F involved in the technology.

Bob Cook


________________________________
From: Axil Axil <[email protected]>
Sent: Thursday, November 3, 2016 10:19 PM
To: vortex-l
Subject: Re: [Vo]:A "eutectic mist" for maximum catalytic surface area

A cavitation based bubble compression process using a mix of Lithium 7 fluoride 
 and lithium 7 hydride salt using ultrasound might also work.

Also see

Method of generating energy by acoustically induced cavitation fusion and 
reactor therefor
US 4333796 A
ABSTRACT
Two different cavitation fusion reactors (CFR's) are disclosed. Each comprises 
a chamber containing a liquid (host) metal such as lithium or an alloy thereof. 
Acoustical horns in the chamber walls operate to vary the ambient pressure in 
the liquid metal, creating therein small bubbles which are caused to grow to 
maximum sizes and then collapse violently in two steps. In the first stage the 
bubble contents remain at the temperature of the host liquid, but in the second 
stage the increasing speed of collapse causes an adiabatic compression of the 
bubble contents, and of the thin shell of liquid surrounding the bubble. 
Application of a positive pressure on the bubble accelerates this adiabatic 
stage, and causes the bubble to contract to smaller radius, thus increasing 
maximum temperatures and pressures reached within the bubble. At or near its 
minimum radius the bubble generates a very intense shock wave, creating high 
pressures and temperatures in the host liquid. These extremely high pressures 
and temperatures occur both within the bubbles and in the host liquid, and 
cause hydrogen isotopes in the bubbles and liquid to undergo thermonuclear 
reactions. In one type of CFR the thermonuclear reaction is generated by 
cavitation within the liquid metal itself, and in the other type the reaction 
takes place primarily within the bubbles. The fusion reactions generate energy 
that is absorbed as heat by the liquid metal, and this heat is removed from the 
liquid by conduction through the acoustical horns to an external heat 
exchanger, without any pumping of the liquid metal
https://www.google.com/patents/US4333796

On Thu, Nov 3, 2016 at 11:54 PM, Jones Beene 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

The recent revelation from Mills/ BrLP ... that after 25 years and $100 million 
spent, the most effective catalyst found thus far is silver... and he uses it 
in the form of vapor by passing an electric arc... this scenario raises the 
question of an alternative method which could be implemented at lower operating 
parameters.

The boiling point of silver is almost 4000F  (2190 C) which is out of the 
question for most experimenters. An alternative to thermal vaporization would 
be a mist or fog - possibly created from the liquid state by ultrasonics - 
similar to the foggers are used with water. In the case of silver, the melting 
point is high as a pure metal; however, silver is notorious for forming 
eutectics with markedly lower m.p.

The most interesting eutectic found so far for LENR would be lithium-silver; 
since lithium may catalytic in a different way as well as active for a fusion 
reaction. Thus a lithium-silver eutectic which melts at less than 300 C could 
be irradiated with ultrasound to produce a catalytic fog or mist in a near 
vacuum chamber which is much easier to pull off on a small scale than the 
massive arc required to vaporize silver. Ionization would be initiated using a 
radioactive isotope and become self-sustained at a higher level by EUV emission.

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