Dam! I just went and looked at the Romanowski abstract again, and its title is:
" Density Functional Calculations of the Hydrogen Adsorption on Transition 
Metals and Their Alloys. An Application to Catalysis"   
http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/la981339q

I was just serendipitously following links yesterday at APL or some other 
journal site, and saw an interesting titled article which I thought might be 
relevant to LENR, and it was all about how Density Functional Theory (DFT) was 
more accurately explaining nuclear processes... I'll see if I can find it.

-Mark

-----Original Message-----
From: MarkI-ZeroPoint [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Tuesday, August 07, 2012 11:50 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: [Vo]:Celani's Ni-H demo at NIWeek2012

So it wasn’t Colonel Mustard with the lead pipe, but the Polish Alloyist with 
the Constantin wire! 
:-)

And the first Clue is actually a little earlier in msg44287:

REF: http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/msg44287.html
-mi

-----Original Message-----
From: Jones Beene [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Tuesday, August 07, 2012 11:10 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: [Vo]:Celani's Ni-H demo at NIWeek2012

Well - vortex may have played a part, behind the scenes, in this work. Why?

The first paragraph of Celani's paper mentions the Romanowski paper and the 
Constantan alloy he is using.

As to how that gets back to this us - it was first mentioned about a year ago, 
see:

http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/msg44320.html

Ahern had first used the Romanowski paper as a guideline to have this 
particular alloy made at Ames, which he used in his EPRI work; following which 
he then sent a sample to Celani, which he used to replicate Brian's result, and 
now Celani has made it into a wire, which is specially treated and gives even 
better results than before. Actually the results are almost the same 22 watts 
seen by Ahern, but now the instrumentation is much better and the wire may 
weigh less than the powder and the run time is longer. It is probably etched to 
give nano-porosity.

There is no beta or gamma radiation happening with the excess energy at all. 
This is NOT a nuclear reaction.

Jones


-----Original Message-----
From: Akira Shirakawa 

Short summary
- Celani's demo reactor was turned on for about 6 hours before NIWeek
2012 started, on Saturday
- On Sunday the demo reactor was brought to the NIWeek 2012 hall where it got 
turned on before 12:00 and *still is working*, so for a total of
55 hours as of writing.
- The reaction is stable. Peak excess heat power was 22W, currently stabilized 
at about 14W
- Testing performed in front of a wide audience
- Celani's testing wire is made as a Cu-Ni-Mn alloy, a good sample which was 
already previously used 4 times by him at his labs in Frascati (Italy)



New paper by Celani et al. attached:

http://goo.gl/K1T0M

* * *

Cu-Ni-Mn alloy wires, with improved sub-micrometric surfaces, used as LENR 
device by new transparent, dissipation-type, calorimeter

Francesco Celani, E. F. Marano, A. Spallone, A. Nuvoli, E. Purchi(, M. 
Nakamura, B. Ortenzi, S. Pella, E. Righi, G. Trenta, S. Bartalucci, G. 
L. Zangari, F. Micciulla, S. Bellucci.

  Abstract -- Starting in February 2011, we studied the feasibility of new 
Nickel based alloys that are able to absorb proper amounts of Hydrogen (H2) 
and/or Deuterium (D2) and that have, in principle, some possibility to generate 
anomalous thermal effects at temperatures >100°C.
The interest in Ni comes in part because there is the possibility to use
H2 instead of expensive D2. Reports by F. Piantelli (since 1992), G. 
Miley (about 1995), M. Patterson, F. Celani (since 2010) and, overall, claims 
by A. Rossi and (later on) by Defkalion Company, could be further investigated. 
Moreover, cross-comparison of results using Hydrogen instead of Deuterium can 
be made and could help the understanding of the phenomena involved (nuclear 
origin?) because use of such isotopes.

* * *

A meaty update!
S.A.



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