Charles,
                Jones Beene often reiterates the importance of Thermacore with 
citations and I would be surprised if he hasn't mentioned this one 
specifically, The report  does support a molecular form of hydrogen [hydrino] 
and it places it still detectable via spectrpscopy on the surface of Ni cathode 
used in electrolysis of K2CO3. It remains unknown if the "hydrino" is still in 
situ or if the molecule can exit the geometry and remain intact..and if so does 
it reside in a vacancy like a hydrogen proton in the lattice or does it become 
squeezed out? Does the lattice structure reinforce the novel structure or expel 
it?
Fran

The electron of the hydrogen atom is predicted by Mills to transition to 
fractional energy
levels releasing energy when contacting an energy sink resonant with the 
hydrogen energy
released. The "ash" of the process is the "shrunken" hydrogen atom called a 
hydrino.
Lehigh University (Dr. A. Miller), Bethlehem, PA, using ESCA (Electron 
Spectroscopy
for Chemical Analysis)'6' has found the hydrino molecule absorbed on the 
surface of nickel
cathodes used in electrolysis of K2CO3. This work shows a peak near 55 eV which 
is predicted
by Mill's to be the binding energy of the electron for a hydrino molecule. 
Lehigh's exhaustive
evaluations have found no other explanation for this peak.

From: Charles Francis [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Thursday, July 11, 2013 5:30 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: EXTERNAL: [Vo]:Potassium Carbonate

Likely this has been discussed on list before, but here goes:

Concerning his recent patent update, Andrea Rossi apparently removed claims to 
the catalyst (re: the Cat in E-Cat) and it was suggested that this might have 
to do with prior use of his secret ingredient (i.e., perhaps he borrowed the 
recipe from elsewhere or inadvertently rediscovered it).

I just noticed that anomalous heat production from Potassium Carbonate in 
combination with atomic hydrogen and nickel is mentioned in this unclassified 
1994 military report: http://www.lenr-canr.org/acrobat/GernertNnascenthyd.pdf
(the authors, incidentally, seem to be those today linked with BlackLight Power)

Moreover, purportedly leaked notes from a 2012 Defkalion visit again mention 
Potassium Carbonate: 
http://ecatnews.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/10/Summary-of-Visit-to-Defkalion.pdf

So is Potassium Carbonate used in the Rossi/Defkalion devices? And is powdering 
nickel sufficiently innovative to be protected by a Rossi patent? Would the 
Potassium Carbonate/Nickel/Hydrogen combination for energy production be under 
patent somewhere else or is it in the public domain?

Charles

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