In reply to Bob Higgins's message of Sat, 18 Jul 2015 19:57:12 -0600: Hi, [snip] There is very little Li7 in the ash, so the high masses based on Li7 might be below the detection threshold. The values for Li + 3 hydrinos can indeed be ruled out as you suggest. That leaves Li6 + 1 or Li6 + 2 with masses 7 & 8 respectively. The mass 7 would be masked by Li7 therefore be undetectable. That leaves the mass 8, which might show up, though in order to catalyze the neutron transfer reaction a fairly high p value molecule would be needed, and these tend to have binding energies in the keV for the third Hydrinohydride, so it's possible that it might be too tightly bound for the ion beam to dislodge with a sufficient frequency for Li6Hy2 to show up.
>If a lithium atom were to replace 1-3 electrons with hydrinohydrides as a >stable molecule, this surely would show up in the SIMS of the fuel in the >Lugano report. SIMS measures mass and you would see a spectrum of >6Li+(1,2,3) and 7Li+(1,2,3), or m/z=8,9,10 should show up and they don't. >A possible counter argument would be that the fully populated Lithium >tri-hydrinohydride would not be ionizable and hence not detectable in >SIMS. However, a Lithium + 1 or 2 hydrinohydrides should be ionizable and >should populate m/z = 8,9 and these are not seen. > >Bob Higgins > >On Fri, Jul 17, 2015 at 6:13 PM, <mix...@bigpond.com> wrote: > >> In reply to Axil Axil's message of Fri, 17 Jul 2015 19:21:04 -0400: >> Hi, >> [snip] >> >But how did the lithium get inside and at the center of the nickel >> >particle. A few post ago you invented a new type of neutral particle do do >> >that. >> >> The neutral particle is a triangle of Hydrinohydride ions (each with a >> charge of >> -1), with a Lithium nucleus (+3) at the center of the triangle. >> >> The negative particle is a tetrahedron of Hydrinohydride ions with Li+++ >> at the >> core, IOW = the neutral triangle with an extra Hydrinohydride added. >> >> Both particles are created through one by one addition of Hydrinohydride >> to a >> Lithium atom. Each time a Hydrinohydride ion is added it displaces an >> existing >> electron from the atom, until there are no electrons left. Because >> electrons are >> displaced, the particle is neutral overall until the fourth Hydrinohydride >> is >> added. >> The calculation of energy released as the particle is built up is in the >> attached pdf document. >> >> Regards, >> >> Robin van Spaandonk >> >> http://rvanspaa.freehostia.com/project.html >> Regards, Robin van Spaandonk http://rvanspaa.freehostia.com/project.html