MFMP Hypothesis: Celani Wire Splits Hydrogen  October 15, 2013 • 31
Comments<http://www.e-catworld.com/2013/10/mfmp-hypothesis-celani-wire-splits-hydrogen/#comments>

There’s an interesting
document<https://docs.google.com/document/d/1qNWp3zuLhKc0PumqMnJQrY5Njk5fZRIZTnZyJ8IhDxE/edit>published
on the Martin Fleischman Memorial Project’s
quantumheat.org site in which they propose experimental analysis the Celani
wire which is made of a nickel-copper alloy called constantan. They say
that some observers of their work are proposing that the excess heat they
are measuring in their experiments is caused by the ‘Langmuir effect’ — a
phenomenon discovered by Irving Langmuir in the 1920s where a tungsten
filament at high temperatures causes hydrogen to split from a molecular
state to a ‘monatomic‘ state, and then recombine, releasing energy in the
process.

They note that Sergio Focardi said that “said that mono-atomic hydrogen was
critical to LENR”, which raises the question of whether there is any
connection between the Langmuir effect and LENR. The temperatures that the
MFMP have been working at are apparently much lower than those required for
the Langmuir effect to take place.

They write:

We are going to test the hypothesis that Celanis’ nano Copper-Nickel wire ‘
catalytically’ splits molecular Hydrogen into monatomic Hydrogen.

This is important for a few reasons.  First, there shouldn’t be much to any
solitary Hydrogen at these temperatures according to what Langmuir
reported.  Second, the Langmuir effect has been proposed as an explanation
for why Celanimaybe seeing higher temperatures post calibration.  And,
third, the ability to load the metal lattice with monatomic hydrogen is
speculated by some to be an important piece for making LENR happen.

The full document which outlines the proposed experimental procedure can be
read 
here<http://www.quantumheat.org/index.php/en/follow/general-updates/344-does-celani-wire-split-h2>.
In keeping with their Open Science approach, the MFMP team is looking for
guidance from the public at large.

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