The Inconel wire could be the "Mouse" integrated into the reactor design.
On Tue, Oct 14, 2014 at 10:10 AM, Jones Beene <[email protected]> wrote: > In searching the TP2 document, Inconel is mentioned 11 times, but never the > grade. Great technical writing, for sure. > > All of the grades have substantial nickel of course, and a few are loaded > with what are known as Mills' catalysts in addition to nickel. Inconel 617 > would be especially active due to the high molybdenum and Inconel 625 is > known to load and retain hydrogen at high temperature. > > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inconel > http://cat.inist.fr/?aModele=afficheN&cpsidt=2722217 > > A common theme in Mills' papers is the synergy of using many catalysts > instead of one or two. When carrying 3-phase current, there will be a part > of each cycle where the wire attracts protons. All of the hydrogen could in > principle be stored in the Inconel after it has been released from the > carrier alloy where it is poised to densify. > > In any event, there seems to be no good reason to eliminate the Inconel as > being active, since it contains lots of nickel - especially in the context > of SPP. > > The main way that SPP are known to form is on the interface of a metal and > ceramic in the presence of a light source and an electric field, which > would > be the resistance wire itself. Sounds like the ideal setup for SPP, no? > > Would SPP alone supply excess heat? Dunno. That has apparently never been > considered. Alternatively would SPP catalyze the formation of f/H or DDL? > Probably. > > If it were known that SPP alone produced excess heat when the reactor was > operated above 500C, (where IR light starts to be produced at sufficient > wavelength) that would be a reason that one would not want to calibrate > above this temperature, as it would reveal too much. > > But it would not surprise anyone who has followed both LENR and Mills, and > assuming that excess heat will be validated, if the Mills camp picks up on > the Inconel wires - to claim that this is hydrino tech. > > Jones > > > > >

