Re: [Vo]:C60D60 - Fullerene Deuteride as a fusion fuel?

2014-06-27 Thread Roarty, Francis X
To: vortex-l Subject: EXTERNAL: Re: [Vo]:C60D60 - Fullerene Deuteride as a fusion fuel? On Thu, Jun 26, 2014 at 8:54 PM, Jones Beene jone...@pacbell.netmailto:jone...@pacbell.net wrote: Imagine... a Fullerene... which is of course 60 atoms of carbon arranged in the famous tightly bound sphere

RE: [Vo]:C60D60 - Fullerene Deuteride as a fusion fuel?

2014-06-27 Thread Jones Beene
Fran, An interesting point about the FD - is in the context of the Casimir force. For a moment let's consider an empty Fullerene. A lot is known about them http://web.mit.edu/anish/www/Carbon-JBH-2004.pdf Of course, the sphere itself, if large enough, could be a Casimir cavity which would then

Re: [Vo]:C60D60 - Fullerene Deuteride as a fusion fuel?

2014-06-27 Thread Bob Cook
Jed several days ago listed the link to the Japanese CF Society Conference papers. Its 235 pages of interesting experimental and theoretical content. http://www.jcfrs.org/file/jcf14-proceedings.pdf Some of the theory claims to explain much of the CF phenomena. There seems to be reported

Re: [Vo]:C60D60 - Fullerene Deuteride as a fusion fuel?

2014-06-27 Thread Bob Cook
An additional thought on the LENR science. Once the science is identified,backed by world accepted theory, the various patent offices with have to accept patents and invention using the science with take off at an ever increasing rate. This could happen pretty fast and draw even more of

RE: [Vo]:C60D60 - Fullerene Deuteride as a fusion fuel?

2014-06-27 Thread Jones Beene
Oops. Hasty error. ... the diameter of the C60 is about 7 angstrom. This is actually smaller than the Bohr diameter (twice the Bohr radius). Since even hydrogen is not encouraged to enter - there should be an ultra vacuum inside C60. Actually

RE: EXTERNAL: RE: [Vo]:C60D60 - Fullerene Deuteride as a fusion fuel?

2014-06-27 Thread Roarty, Francis X
: [Vo]:C60D60 - Fullerene Deuteride as a fusion fuel? Fran, An interesting point about the FD - is in the context of the Casimir force. For a moment let's consider an empty Fullerene. A lot is known about them http://web.mit.edu/anish/www/Carbon-JBH-2004.pdf Of course, the sphere itself

Re: [Vo]:C60D60 - Fullerene Deuteride as a fusion fuel?

2014-06-26 Thread Kevin O'Malley
For a while we saw dozens of PhD dissertations of someone's favorite molecule entrapped in a fullerene. Why not ours? But CNTs make more sense for a V1DLLBEC theory. You constrain every vibrational reaction direction except up-or-down the tube. Things happen in 1 direction that don't happen in

Re: [Vo]:C60D60 - Fullerene Deuteride as a fusion fuel?

2014-06-26 Thread Kevin O'Malley
On Thu, Jun 26, 2014 at 8:54 PM, Jones Beene jone...@pacbell.net wrote: Imagine... a Fullerene... which is of course 60 atoms of carbon arranged in the famous tightly bound sphere, and known to be superconductor in certain conditions -- but now we fully hydrogenate these carbon atoms with