Alain,
Nice catch! Yes Argon and other noble gases are claimed to
be catalysts with respect to the hydrino - even if other researchers call
them inverse Rydberg or fractional hydrogen. Gas loading into a rigid
catalytic metal lattice is already more vigorous than wet electrolytic cells
and I would suggest that there may be a similar increase in vigor when a gas
catalyst is introduced into hydrogen when loading into a metal lattice. I
have always contended that the active geometry can even form temporarily in
a totally gaseous environment similar to sonoluminesce only the flattened
meniscus is a conductive gas instead of a liquid that traps and forms the
fractional hydrogen bubble. The sonoluminescence and gaseous equivalent are
self destructive and energy must be used to constantly re-generate the
geometry but this idea of loading both the hydrogen and a catalyzing noble
gas into the lattice may be the best of both worlds! I can imagine both
gases becoming fractional and then the fractional hydrogen becoming further
fractionalized by the fractional noble gas.
Fran
[Vo]:Catalyser ? argon ?
Alain Sepeda
Sat, 21 Jan 2012 13:33:22 -0800
Hi,
I've just found that comment
http://tech.groups.yahoo.com/group/H-Ni_Fusion/message/1303
here they say that celani succeed in making Ni+H with argon "catalyst", a
catalyst used by mills.
and I note that Argon is used inside Hyperion to insulate the reactor from
the out-box...
maybe not only ...
any comment on that ?
Celani makes his fantastic experiment producing energy continous for 6 days
> with
> COP 2 and 1800 Watt/g Nickel in an 900 Celsius, 6 bar H2-Ar(!!!)
> atmosphere.
>
> This means for me simply: Celani also believes in the shrinking of the
> H-Atom
> and the catalysators from Mills. He takes the best from two worlds, Rossi
> and
> Mills:-).
>
> This may be VERY important. Mills most favourite catalysators are
> Argon(50%)together with H2 (50%). (K2CO3 in other experiments from Pons
> Fleischmann typ).
>