From: Kevin O'Malley 

This paper sounds familiar, as if I had heard the same things a couple of years 
ago.  But I've searched through Vort archives and nothing rings the bell.

Kevin,

Not sure what direction you are going with this – but in 2010 – we were talking 
about fractional electron charge (AKA: FQHE) as being the driving force behind 
one form of LENR – at least the non-nuclear version of LENR and possibly the 
Mills’ version - which happens at the nanoscale or in Casimir cavities. Several 
times since then, the fractional Hall effect has been tied to thermal anomalies.

https://www.mail-archive.com/vortex-l%40eskimo.com/msg40603.html

“I won't go into all of the lore of monatomic hydrogen, going back to 
Langmuir, or the Mills' version of fractional hydrogen called the hydrino -
except to say that there is another possibility that encompasses both of
these phenomena - and it can explain other "hot hydrogen" (HH) phenomena or
anomalies, so long as we limit it to two dimensions.
 
This possibility would also suggest that a Casimir cavity is or acts 'as if'
it were a two dimensional space. There are a number of papers on this second
prerequisite, many of them by Calloni, but I will save that for another
time. The argument is sound.

According to Laughlin, electrons can form an exotic state with fractional
charge in two dimensions. Unlike the putative hydrino, this seemingly odder
beast is accepted by the mainstream. It has even won a Nobel. Consequently,
taking this bit of insight to the next level - given that all electrons are
happy to form pairs, it is suggested that HH is itself related to FQHE via
paired electrons.”

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