I see...
So, you acknowledge that the Mills process does produce considerable amount
of energy that can not be accounted by chemical processes.. This specific
objection you have is whether this process would be economical based on your
conjecture that titanium can not be recycled. So, you are now convinced
that Mills may have something? Are you now prepared to retract your
previous statements that Mills is simply doing a dog and pony show to
investors instead of demonstrating a viable process?
But, aren't there other catalysts other than titanium. Would these other
catalyst present the same problem of cost and one time use that you
conjecture? If these other catalysts produce energy, though it may not be
as high as Titanium, wouldn't Mill's Suncell still be a viable technology,
even with just a COP of 2? or even as low as COP 1.1 since its output is
electricity with can be directly fed up to drive the sparks. And at its
small form factor, it would be a viable generator even if it just produces
1kw of net electricity - wouldn't you agree? I for one can use 2 or 3 of
these units to produce 2-3kw of electricity which would be sufficient for my
home.
Jojo
----- Original Message -----
From: "Jones Beene" <[email protected]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Saturday, July 26, 2014 1:34 AM
Subject: RE: [Vo]:Is the SunCell a titanium burner?
-----Original Message-----
From: Jojo Iznart
Have you or anyone else done the math on whether the burning (oxidation)
of Titanium could account for the energy release, which by one account
here
in vortex says has about a COP of 100. Can such miniscule amounts of nano
powder actually account for the energy assuming it is being oxidized ...
No oxidation is only a small part and not the complete story. Instead, the
energy of oxidation provides the initial ionization which is necessary for
hydrogen to fractionalize into redundant ground states. The catalyst must
ionize first, and the combination of a low voltage electric arc and
oxygenation will provide what Mills calls an "energy hole" which catalyzes
shrinkage. Mills does not provide enough data for any kind of mathematical
analysis.