Speaking of the Sun-Cell and its early commercialization.

Tritium generation is the gold standard of proof in LENR. There is nothing
else which comes close to the certainty afforded by finding a reaction which
produces tritium at lower energy input. But the experiment itself becomes
radioactive and rather dangerous since tritium is hydrophilic and
carcinogenic -- and is therefore seldom performed today.

The Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) was created to ensure the safe use
of radioactive materials for civilian purposes. The NRC regulates all
commercial uses of nuclear materials, even the small amounts of tritium
(micrograms) used in nuclear medicine.

The signature of tritium is a well-known beta decay with a short and
predictable half-life which cannot happen naturally, and also is easy to
detect with inexpensive meters. Discovery of the tritium signature is thus
rock-solid proof of a nuclear reaction. The signal has been reported many
times in peer reviewed experiments from the early days. These experiments
have been generally ignored by the mainstream.

It may surprise many LENR advocates to learn that one of the first claimants
of tritium production in light water electrolysis was none other than
Randell Mills, who published his results in the highly regarded Fusion
Technology Magazine over twenty-four years ago - long before there was even
a company called Blacklight Power. Mills of course would love to have the
world ignore this detail about tritium today, since he wants nothing to do
with anything that smacks of "nuclear" and wishes to portray the Sun Cell as
completely non-nuclear. 

Yet the possibility that tritium occurs as an inherent result of the Mills
effect will not be erased until he permits an independent observer to
monitor the experiment for tritium (which has not happened). Any level of
secrecy creates a problem for eventual certification of the Sun Cell - if it
should bring the results into the purview of the NRC. 

BTW - the legacy of tritium discovery by Mills lives on in US Patent
6,024,935 - where the inventor himself quotes many varied and different
sources to support the discovery of tritium in nickel-light water
electrolysis (curiously ignoring Claytor and LANL) in favor of:
1)      Notoya, "Tritium Generation . . . Nickel Electrodes", Fusion
Technology, vol. 26. 
2)      Oka, et. al., "D2O-fueled fusion power reactor using
electromagnetically induced.Deuterium-tritium reactions-- Fusion Technology,
vol. 16, No. 2, Sep. 1989, pp. 263-267.
3)      Srinivasan, et. al., "Tritium and Excess Heat Generation during
Electrolysis of Aqueous Solutions of Alkali Salts with Nickel Cathode", 3rd
Annual Conference on Cold Fusion.
4)      Chien, et. al., "On an Electrode . . . Tritium and Helium", J.
Electroanal Chem., 1992, pp. 189-212.
5)      Storms, et. al., "Electroyltic Tritium Production", Fusion
Technology, vol. 17, Jul. 1990, pp. 680-695.

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