RE C. Cooper
Hi, Found out a little bit about Chris Cooper.  He was actually the founder
of Seldon Technologies, which is based on his work with CNT's. He was
trained in nuclear physics and may have a Ph., D. in it. He ( and maybe his
father? William  Cooper) have fairly recently written over a dozen patent
apps, mostly  on CNTs in various applications.  The water purification
technology, which is quite straightforward is described in this paper
DeVolder M.  et al 2013, Carbon nanotubes: Present and future commercial
applications. Sci 339:534-9.
  I have been following various aspects of graphene for a little while for
bionanotechnology apps, but mostly for the hell of it, but also always
looking for its possible use as  lattice materials, some of which was
kindled by Jones' comments a while back on silicon carbide. Graphene can be
made a number of ways, some of which involves splitting of carbon nanotubes
to form ribbons, including tunable ones, 'armchair' and the like. It can
also be made directly from silicon carbide (Peng et al 2013. Direct
transformation of amorphous silicon carbide into graphene under low
temperature and ambient pressure. Scientific reports 3(1148) FREE).   Also
they form Dirac cones which I gather, although I know nothing about them
myself, are interesting.
cheers, ken


On Sat, Mar 1, 2014 at 10:10 AM, Bob Cook <frobertc...@hotmail.com> wrote:

> Fran and Jones--
>
> Maybe they make a thin substrate ( that H diffuses through, gouge out a
> line with a laser beam or electron beam, lay in the nanotubes and then make
> layers of the nanotube filled substrate film, sandwich these between good
> heat conductors with high magnetic susceptibility and finally  fuse the
> assembly together in a plate-like array under temperature and pressure.
>
> That could do away with finding a geometric compound that naturally forms
> alternating geometries.
>
> Bob
> ----- Original Message ----- From: "Frank roarty" <fr...@roarty.biz>
> To: <vortex-l@eskimo.com>
> Sent: Saturday, March 01, 2014 6:37 AM
> Subject: RE: [Vo]:"Christopher H. Cooper"
>
>
>
>  Jones, Yes, I agree.. the paper from Cornell re catalytic action only
>> occurring at openings and defects in nano tubes would also lend support to
>> your suspicion that he may be legit. He is in the correct industry and may
>> have discovered a way to increase the defects thru self assembly that
>> would
>> surpass the random nature of the tubules approach. We know water molecules
>> do some unique alignments when drawn thru a nano filter and we know
>> multiwall nanotubes basically self assemble so perhaps he has married
>> tubes
>> to some geometric compound that naturally forms alternating geometries
>> inside the nanotube..basically the Haisch- Modell tunnels but much smaller
>> and self assembled.
>> Fran
>>
>> _____________________________________________
>> From: Jones Beene [mailto:jone...@pacbell.net]
>> Sent: Friday, February 28, 2014 3:37 PM
>> To: vortex-l@eskimo.com
>> Subject: [Vo]:"Christopher H. Cooper"
>>
>>
>> Prolific inventor, possibly in LENR: "Christopher H. Cooper"
>>
>> https://www.google.com/search?tbo=p&tbm=pts&hl=en&q=
>> ininventor:%22Christophe
>> r+H.+Cooper%22
>>
>> Is Chris legit ... or is he more of a patent troll?
>>
>> Over 200 hits and no known data or publications that I can find to back up
>> the claims... at least the excess energy claims. No papers on LENR-CANR or
>> elsewhere pop up on google.
>>
>> Here is why I ask - many of his filings are definitely LENR based, but
>> there
>> is not much evidence that any have been reduced to practice. Most of them
>> seem to have been filed after the Rossi information about "tubules" or
>> whatever it was.
>>
>> https://www.google.com/patents/US20110255644
>>
>> However, he appears to be affiliated with a water filtration company,
>> Seldon
>> Technologies of Vermont, which seems to be a player in CNT filters - so it
>> is quite possible that he stumbled onto the energy anomaly via other R&D.
>>
>> I would love to see the data - if there is any.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>

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