Jones Beene <[email protected]> wrote:

> No. That is not correct. Tritium would have already have been detected by
> Bianchini if it was there . . .


I do not think so. Tritium would be trapped inside the cell. The decay
product is a low energy beta. If a little tritium leaks out of the cell it
is not likely to reach the detector, which only covers a small amount of
the surface surrounding the cell.

The only way Bianchini could detect this would be if Rossi makes a cell
with a high quality tube and connectors to the cell contents and allows
Bianchini to sample the gas. That is also the only way anyone could detect
an increase in deuterium or any other gaseous nuclear product. This is a
very difficult and involved thing to do. You have to purge the tube and
other hardware. You have to use Swaglok connectors and you have to pay
fanatical attention to cleanliness. If you touch any part of metal where
the gas will flow, your fingerprint will contain more hydrogen than all of
the reaction products from several days of high temperature heat
production. Consider this: assuming the ratio of heat to helium is the same
as plasma fusion, a Pd-D automobile that runs for a year, producing as much
heat as the average gasoline burning automobile, will consume roughly 1 g
of D2O. That's 48 million miles per gallon of D2O.

- Jed

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