There is another plasmon friendly based factor at play here. This factor is
illustrative in the way Mizuno has advanced his thinking and research over
the years in an evolutionary step by step manor. Early on, Mizuno
discovered that his reaction benefited from distressing the surface of
palladium and nickel using electrical discharges thereby producing
countless pits and spikes in his LENR active surfaces. Now with the advent
of the mesh reactor, Mizuno forms those pits in the spaces generated by the
mesh in a highly organized and regular methodology. This innovation
standardizes the production of the pits or in Nanoplasmonic terms optical
cavities that give plasmons their best chance for life.

On Fri, Jun 28, 2019 at 9:19 PM JonesBeene <[email protected]> wrote:

>
>
> FWIW. This detail may have relevance to the Mizuno breakthrough (claimed)
> … or not.
>
>
>
> Surface plasmons are a hot topic in physics these days. If surface
> plasmons are important to the new Mizuno results then the resistance heater
> which he uses may be an important component, even if it was chosen for low
> cost.
>
>
>
> These heaters provide light emission in the IR and visible red spectrum,
> which is the driving force for plasmon formation. Palladium is optically
> active for plasmon formation, as is nickel.
>
>
>
> In particular, there is an known optical anomaly for palladium at the
> visible red photon emission at 650 nm, which corresponds to the red glow of
> heater wire in the temperature range around 1,400° F. This would be an
> expected temperature of thin resistance wire powered at 50 watts for
> instance.
>
>
>
> Palladium has perfect absorbance at this particular wavelength but is very
> sensitive to hydrogen contact which can create an oscillation effect
> leading to surface plasmons. There has been informed speculation that
> surface plasmons have a role in hydrogen densification.  They are often
> pictured as a vortex which suggests the way they operate to densify.
>
>
>
> The “heat color” of resistance wire at 650 nm wavelength is the well-known
>  intense red color that we associate with the old style room heaters and
> also some quartz IR heaters.
>
>
>
> Jones
>
>
>
>
>
>
>

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