Does someone have the capability of doing a Differential Scanning
Calorimeter measurement on Sodium Hydride (NaH)?  NaH can be bought
from chemical suppliers where it is sold as 60% weight NaH and 40%
weight mineral oil.  The oil keeps air and water from contacting it
and chemically reacting with it.  There is no Raney Nickel involved.
According to wikipedia, the oil can be rinsed off the NaH with pentane
or tetrahydrofuran.

Mills gets an exothermic reaction of 354 kJ/mole H2 (or 177 kJ/mole H)
when he put .067 grams of Sodium Hydride in the Differential Scanning
Calorimeter (reaction started at 640 C).  That's 45% higher energy
than the 242 kJ/mole for burning hydrogen in air - even though the
sample volume had been flushed with helium twice before the start of
the test.

 Is it possible that there was enough oxygen contamination (from
leaking or whatever) to burn with the hydrogen?  Could they  have
incorrectly measured the amount of NaH in their sample?  If not, then
this test (when carefully done) could be a verification method of
Mills data.  Just rule out oxygen contamination and weight measuring
mistakes.

Magnesium Hydride (MgH2) was used in a separate test and displayed the
predicted endothermic reaction of decompisition and endothermic
reaction of melting magnesium.  Since this test didn't have oxygen
contamination issues then I would assume the NaH test didn't either.

look at page 21 here from BLP's paper regarding this differential
scanning calorimeter test:
http://www.blacklightpower.com/papers/WFC101608WebS.pdf

One thing I don't understand is that there was an endothermic reaction
at 350 C where sodium hydride decomposed before the exothermic
reaction (hydrino creation) starting at 640 C.  If the sodium hydride
decomposed then all of the hydrogen has evaporated and there is no
longer a NaH molecule.  According to Mike Carrell the NaH molecule is
necessary for the hydrogen shrinkage reaction because  the breaking of
the bond energy between the Na and H is involved in absorbing a
portion of the 54.4 eV from the hydrogen shrinkage (along with double
ionization of Na to Na++).

Does the monatomic hydrogen released during decomposition recombine
with another H to make H2?  That would prevent the hydrino reaction.
Somehow the monatomic H has to recombine with the Na to make NaH at
640 C so as to trigger the hydrino reaction.

Does this mean you could coat sodium metal onto nanoparticles and
expose them to hydrogen at 640 C and trigger the hydrino reaction?

you can read about differential scanning calorimetry here
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Differential_scanning_calorimetry

Jeff D.

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