http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn24497-iron-nanoants-made-to-haul-huge-loads-with-light.html#.UnW3gD3D_2I

Iron 'nano-ants' made to haul huge loads with light

Here is an application of nanoparticle locomotion.


Using an iron based secret sauce  may be something to use in the Ni/H
reactor to get the particle pile over to the micro-particles.


On Sat, Nov 2, 2013 at 10:27 PM, Axil Axil <[email protected]> wrote:

> The Ni/H reaction is a truly complicated beast. Light and nanoparticles
> can exert force on each other. The smaller that the nanoparticles are, the
> more optical force that is involved.
>
>
> http://www.uam.es/gruposinv/MoLE/Publications_Data_Base/2006-2011/GIANT%20Enhanced%20Diffusion%20of%20Gold%20Nanoparticles%20In%20Optcial%20Vortex%20Fields.pdf
>
> *Giant Enhanced Diffusion of Gold Nanoparticles in Optical Vortex Fields*
>
> Unless these very small nanoparticles are nailed down, they will jump
> around aimlessly under the force of the infrared photons.
>
> This is one important reason for adding large nanoparticles to the dust
> storm inside the reaction chamber of the Ni/H reactor. The “secret sauce”
> provides these large nanoparticle anchors to the dust storm so that the
> small nanoparticles can combined with them and not jump around so much when
> infrared photons hit them.
>
> These smallest nanoparticles become rock solid when the pile of dust that
> they are a part of lands and glues onto the huge 5 micron micro-particles.
> The small particles behave like rock solid and immovable very sharp points
> on an electrode. They don’t move very much. This increase anchoring allows
> them to form vortex EMF fields rather than these vortex fields pushing them
> all over the place.
>
> Just using very small nanoparticle won't work because of the soliton
> stability factor. A very wide mix of particle sized are required.
>
>
>

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