At 09:21 PM 8/20/2012, Kelley Trezise wrote:
I have suggested that palladium is a red herring. If the phenomena is a surface effect then the outer surface of the palladium or material X will have the greatest number of defects or surface-effect areas and it has been found that roughening the surface will increase the effect. So too, I speculate will loading a bulk sample of palladium to the point that you induce fatigue cracks which will appear first on the surface and propogate inward as the internal pressure within the sample builds up due to the loading with hydrogen. You could get the same effect by first stressing a sample of palladium with proteum to the point that it would have shown the heat effect had it been loaded with deuterium then unloading the proteum and reloading it with deuterium. If the phenomena is a surface effect it should show up almost immediately just as in the case with the codeposited palladium and deuterium. The heat phemonema has show up in so many different material combinations and conditions that there is some other governing parameter other than palladium material. Granted palladium being open to hydrogen would allow it to migrate into the intersticies a little faster but just breaking up the material into a powder could produce the necessary surface defects and porosity needed to allow the heat effect to show up.

Not bad.

Not quite as easy as stated. Hydrogen poisons the reaction with deuterium, so you'd have to get rid of the hydrogen, it won't spontaneously unload, at least not quickly. You'd need to heat it, probably.

When the palladium is heated, or even sitting at room temperature, the cracks can heal, if I'm correct.

Predicting when the heat effect will show is also difficult. Basically, we don't know. Methods are known of preparing palladium that will *usually* produce XP, after a variable delay.

Basically, the effect may be very sensitive to the population of cracks of a precise size.

Storms thinks that the effect will appear if the cracks are the right size, regardless of the material. I'm rather skeptical of that, but it easily could be *partially* true.

Nanopowder and gas-loading are common approaches. Probably even greater success has been seen with matrices including palladium in a structure with other materials.

I've suggested working on controlling crack size, there are a number of possible approaches. Controlled deformation of material made brittle is one approach that could produce many controlled cracks distributed around a specific width.

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