In reply to  Jones Beene's message of Thu, 17 Mar 2022 19:48:52 +0000 (UTC):
Hi,

That's more or less what I had in mind. Mills' "energy hole" is 27.2 eV. This 
equates to a wavelength of 45.582 nm. So a
cavity of that size would resonate at just the right frequency to act as an 
"energy hole", with an "m" of at least 1.
Furthermore, all "m" values would actually be represented, because 2, 3, 4 etc, 
waves would also resonate. If the cavity
had a conductive metal wall, then the electrons in the metal would resonate 
along with the EM wave, and due to the
resistance of the metal, their energy would be converted into heat, thus 
providing a sink for the Hydrino shrinkage
energy.

I proposed this to Mills several years ago, but he doesn't appear to have done 
anything with it.


>Robin
>There is a possibility that the NAE site corresponds to the Casimir effect and 
>its geometry.
>Otherwise it is a coincidence that the presumed active zone is similar.
>
>This Casimir dimension has maximum effect at around 2 nm --- and by now could 
>be etched using state of the art nanolithography 
>
>This is especially interesting if some hind of deuterium "densification" is 
>part of the process since it would be possible to arrange a structured array 
>of precise cavities instead of depending on random placement 
>
>...  nanolithography in order to optimize LENR would be a natural for someone 
>like Google, no? 
>
>Surely they have considered this possibility
>
>
>Robin wrote:  
> > Self-assembly creates regular structures (think crystal growth). It is 
> > being considered for bleeding edge IC production.
>I don't think it's too much of leap to consider using it for e.g. a surface 
>treatment of a cathode, or possibly a 3D
>whole cathode construction, or creation of a target for a gas based reaction.
>With nano particles, you will, by coincidence, get some NAE sites. With 
>self-assembly, you may have the ability to
>ensure that almost all the material consists of NAE sites, thus improving the 
>power density markedly.
>
>Of course this entails knowing exactly what an NAE site is. I have an idea on 
>that score, but it involves Hydrinos, so
>will shut up unless asked.
>
>Regards,
>
>Robin van Spaandonk 
>
>
>  
Regards,

Robin van Spaandonk <mixent...@aussiebroadband.com.au>

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