14 Years Later, Cold Fusion Still Gets The Cold Shoulder 561
segment writes "It has been 14 years since two little-known electrochemists announced what sounded like the biggest physics breakthrough since Enrico Fermi produced a nuclear chain reaction on a squash court in Chicago. Using a tabletop setup, Stanley Pons and Martin Fleischmann, of the University of Utah, said they had induced deuterium nuclei to fuse inside metal electrodes, producing measurable quantities of heat. That was the opening bell for one of the craziest periods in science. Cold fusion, if real, promised to solve the world's energy problems forever. Scientists around the world dropped what they were doing to try to replicate the astounding claim."
The linked AP story (carried on SFGate.com) is about the
Tenth International Conference on Cold Fusion, which took place in the last week of August.
Simple rule of thumb: (Score:3, Interesting)
> Maybe it still gets the cold shoulder because there didn't turn out to be anything to it?
"If it sounds too good to be true, it probably isn't."
That's what I said to a friend the day after the "discovery" hit the news, and I haven't had any cause to reconsider my position since.
Chain Reaction (Score:5, Interesting)
No kidding (Score:0, Interesting)
Re:full text (Score:2, Interesting)
So you could say the trail has grown cold? (Score:4, Interesting)
It been at least that long since we were promised Hydrogen fuel cells. Where's my fuel cell powered truck?
I think consumers have been patient enough. Now it is time for companies to deliver something.
Re:"Still gets the cold shoulder" (Score:4, Interesting)
LS
Pons and Fleischmann (Score:5, Interesting)
The Pons and Fleischmann "cold fusion" experiment was thoroughly discredited shortly after the press conference (in which they grossly overstated their results). Apparently they were spooked by another researcher working in a similar area. They had signed an agreement with him not to release any results, but got paranoid that he was going to "claim the credit", and went ahead and announced - kind of an "announce and hope the results back you up" gamble. Well, the results *didn't* back them up, although it is interesting that many reputable teams who sought to replicate the results initially did so, but one by one retracted their findings when they discovered various flaws in their methodologies.
I think the basic problem with the original Pons and Fleischmann experiment was that their calorimeter (which they used to get their "excess heat" measurements) was either faulty, or inappropriate for the experiement they were performing, and they didn't control for it.
grib.
Old Cold Fusion Stuff (Score:5, Interesting)
http://www.spawar.navy.mil/sti/publications/pub
Cold Fusion experiments for everyone... (Score:2, Interesting)
It seems that he is successful in getting more power produced than power eaten (around 200%).
You'll like all his experiments (full description, RealPlayer videos and full results are publicly available) at:
http://jlnlabs.imars.com/cfr/index.htm [imars.com]
If there are real physicists here, please comment his results, it can be interesting.
Jean-Louis is also the guy who successfully replicated the Lifter [jnaudin.free.fr] (electrostatic propulsion).
Things to remember (Score:5, Interesting)
Science by press release is almost never ever good science.
Big physics has been getting more money than big chemistry. Many chemists jumped on the bandwagon in the hopes of getting research grants in their discipline.
The nature of fusion makes the whole idea of "cold fussion" an oxymoron.
A lot of ameteur's have been getting closer to fusion in their homes [fusor.net] than the cold fusion people have ever gotten.
See sig for final thoughts on this subject.
Re:Cold Fusion experiments for everyone... (Score:4, Interesting)
If he really had a reaction that was actually creating energy, you could unplug the power supply and the reaction would continue. Infact the reaction would continue to grow and a means of throttling the reaction would be necessary.
What he really has here is a rather dangerous light bulb. It's none too efficient either.
Cold Fusion"and Neural Networks: Similar Fates (Score:3, Interesting)
To briefly summarize the tale of woe, Frank Rosenblatt invented the perceptron in 1957. It had one layer of artificial neurons and sparked an entire field of research in artificial learning. In 1969, Marvin Minsky at MIT wrote a book called "Perceptrons: An Introduction to Computational Geometry"; in it, he mathematically proved that the perceptron could not solve certain classes of problems. This book essentially decimated funding for neural-network research for about 15 years.
In 1982, John Hopfield at Caltech revived the field with the invention of the Hopfield Networks. Further, several researchers invented backpropagation as a way to train neural networks with 2 or more layers or artificial neurons and overcame the limitations that Minsky indicated. Now, the field of neural networks has plenty of money to do research.
So, there is a possibility that research into cold fusion will grow hot again.
... from the desk of the reporter [geocities.com]
Media, Culture vs Science (Score:5, Interesting)
I spoke [stanforddaily.com] with a nobel laureate physicist about cold fusion. I found that while he didn't think there was much to cold fusion (it isn't his primary area of research, but if he can't comment on it, who can?), I didn't get the feeling he held the anomosity usually attributed to the scientific community at large. (I frankly don't either) I think that the media plays a significant role in blackening the field. Kind of like the kid on the playground who eggs on fights, but never participates in them.
Scientists believe in publication, in particular good ones. If cold fusion-ites publish interesting/good research on the subject, they will be recognized. As pointed out in the above link, there was a seemingly cold fusion-like experiment that was published in science quite recently (it isn't quite cold fusion, because the events themselves are hot and very small).
Most scientists deal with skeptical peers regularly, this isn't just a property of the cold fusion community. That said, just because there is a conference on it doesn't make it real or even interesting. I personally find it interesting, but I wouldn't bet on seeing commercial applications of this in our lifetimes.
-Sean
Re:Let us dream (Score:3, Interesting)
It *was* given a chance--many of them--and it failed to turn up. Dream if you like, and the rest of us will keep working toward power solutions that actually function.
Old Compuserve Science & Math forum (Score:5, Interesting)
Seems there were a lot of complex things interacting, electrical, chemical, thermal and *mechanical*. The palladium electode absorbing hydrogen gets visibly larger as it pulls the ions in - there was speculation that a lot of energy was being stored this way via a spring-loading effect, but nobody on the forum knew or cared to calculate how much. Spontaneous collapse of many microscopic internal structures in the electrode could account for episodes of heat release IF enough energy is stored this way.
The CFers also claimed elevated radiation near the experiments once. It turned out they were measuring radon levels in the basement where the experiment was being conducted.
Wish I'd saved my Compuserve logs of this stuff, but I couldn't afford the floppies, $5 each at the time. :-)
Anyway, once it became apparent the experiments had many possible flaws and were failing to produce any clear positive results, researchers who valued their career would have been crazy to waste the time.
Anybody here participate in the Science & Math forum back then? I've always wondered what happened to the moderator, Emory Kimbrough.
Re:"Still gets the cold shoulder" (Score:3, Interesting)
Fusion Reactor Types (Score:2, Interesting)
Here are a few different types I have found:
Tokamak Reactor:
Large size, Confines plasma in a toroid.
Stellarator reactor:
Large size, simmilar to a Tokamak.
Laser Ignition Reactor:
Fires extremly powerfull lasers at a target causing fusion.
Inertial Confinement Reactor:
Small size, uses high voltage to fling protons to toward a Tungsten cage. This type of fusion rector can be build easily by anyone with a decent workshop, and acess to a hi-voltage power supply.
Table-top fiusion:
there is evidence that sonoluminescent bubbles could reach temperatures and pressures where fussion can happen.
(my understanding is that cold fusion was an attempt to pull protons into a Palladium electrode increasing the pressure to this sort of level)
I also read that some powered neutron sources use a fusion reaction to create the neutrons.
The tough thing about fusion is not creating fusion, but getting more out than you put in.
Re:Chain Reaction (Score:3, Interesting)
publish instead of patenting it and when something is published
it can't be patented.
So the only option they got where a cover up.
Carl Sagan: "The Burden of Skepticism" (Score:5, Interesting)
Carl Sagan addressed this issue in his essay, "The Burden of Skepticism." [positiveatheism.org] (See also lecture version [uiowa.edu]).
Sagan explained:
Re:Embarassed (Score:3, Interesting)
It is true that physicists can be a prideful lot, but that tends be truer than not for smart people in general. But to reject what would be remarkable new science because they 'got burned' would be beyond pride and well into hubris.
Lots of physicists tried the experiments back in 1989 because the claims were so remarkable, the recipe so simple and the researchers apparently credible enough that they had to at least give it a try. No new science was found. The cold fusion community failed to demonstrate unambiguously that their experimental results were real, trustworthy and replicable.
FOURTEEN years later, and the cold fusion community STILL can't seem to agree on what their results are (neutrons? heat?) nevermind finding unambiguous signs of fusion and it's somehow the critic's fault for being prideful?
Cold fusion researchers are never going to get any attention even negative) at all until they can demonstrate absolutely that there is something there!
My analysis (Score:5, Interesting)
Source of reactor info:
http://jlnlabs.imars.com/cfr/html/cfrtiny2
Experimental setup:
Place tungsten welding rods in a corrosive solution of NaHCO3. Use a AC/DC rectifier to convert wall current to a high DC potential across the rods. Measure the input energy using a power meter. Calculate the output energy by measuring the evaporated water and increase in heat (like you would with a cheapo calorimeter). Compare.
Test and analysis:
Run the system for approximately 3 minutes. Note that, as the rods corrode, their conductance goes down, bringing down the Wattage as well.
This is easily predicted. Resistance (R) is roughly proportional to the rod corrosion. Current (I) equals the applied voltage (V) divided by the resistance; I=V/R. Power (P) is P=I^2*R; for our system, P=(V/R)^2*R=V^2/R. Therefore, as R goes up, the input power goes down. This agrees with the experiment.
The "researcher" then makes several obvious mistakes in calculating the output energy. First, he ignores the effect of the NaHCO3, and pretends the rods were dipped in pure water. Second, he forgets to subtract the 6mL of evaporated water from the 150mL of water that rose in temperature. He also ignores the chemical effect of eating away at the tungsten rods.
His experiment does show more energy output than input, and I believe his numbers are roughly accurate (barring the mistakes outlined above).
My analysis:
This experiment shows that exothermic chemical reactions exist. Other famous examples of exothermic chemical reactions which corrode metal are Energizer and Duracell batteries. Burning a match is also characteristically similar.
His experiment has nothing to do with nuclear reactions. Just chemical ones.
Re:In other news... (Score:4, Interesting)
Obviously some crackpot mixing chemicals in his crucible isn't going to achieve the same (and may as well be pissing in the wind for all the good it would do him). But the underlying principle that you can make turn base metals or anything else into gold is true if you have a spare ten billion years and a star or two to do it with.
Re:"Still gets the cold shoulder" (Score:3, Interesting)
If you have a chance, check out the book The Scientist, the Madman, the Thief and Their Lightbulb: The Biggest Scandal in the History of Science. Other than greats like Tesla, it talks about the political maneuvering that took place at their university, and institutions and other scientists with which they worked.
Fleischmann and Pons' discovery may be considered a hoax by many, but in fact their research has been duplicated (and often with even better "cold fusion" results) by hundreds of scientists all over the world, including here in the US, Japan, and India.
Before you pan something as a conspiracy, do try and do a bit more research, read a book or two on the subject, and ask yourself if you didn't have all the information you needed to make an informed decision in the first place.
Re:"Still gets the cold shoulder" (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Cold Fusion experiments for everyone... (Score:3, Interesting)
If you look at the power meter [imars.com] picture, you'll see 0.347 kWh of electricity used.
He converts this to an input power of 347 watts - which is (pardon my French) cuillons (that's 'bollocks' for the non-Francophones).
0.347 kWh used in 30 minutes is 694 watts input power - thus (as someone has pointed out) he has just made a dangerous lightbulb.
It's an elementary mistake, but buried in so much garbage that it's easy to miss.
Re:A Logical Explanation (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Fusion Reactor Types (Score:3, Interesting)
I always thought that neither pressure nor temperature does even come close to the needed levels.
btw: The ultimate energy source would be an ultrasmall black whole trapped in a ioffe-trap.
Just keep it at a size with significant hawking radiation and feed it with a particle jet.
You get 100% mass to energy conversion.
(but i thing you also get a small problem with entropy and thermodynamics. they dont really like such stuff
Re:electric cars (Score:4, Interesting)
There IS something there... (Score:5, Interesting)
Although it's now been 10 years since I've done any serious research on the subject (every now & then I read the symposium notes), I can give you my opinions of the whole Cold Fusion uproar:
-There is something strange & new going on in these experiments
-This something strange & new has been very difficult to reproduce consistently (much of the research focuses on certain types of atomic level imperfections in the cathodes)
-Pons & Fleischmann screwed the pooch by announcing their results before they could reproduce them. This basically had the effect of turning 95% of the scientific community against them. This has led to many people assuming the entire field of study as bogus.
-Many scientist around the world have reported "good results" - ranging from melted cathodes (excess heat) to extra helium (fusion of hydrogen atoms?).
My guess is that there is some new type of reaction occuring in these experiments. It may or may not be able to produce excess heat. Regardless, I'd bet in 10-20 years, a paper will be published that will explain it all.
As a side note, Dr. Bockris was a very "interesting" fellow to work with - he was the epitomy of the absent minded professor; one day he came in to work with his button down dress shirt on INSIDE OUT (think about how much effort it would take you to button a dress shirt in such a fashion); he frequently would put a MARKER in his front pocket without the cap on - leading to a HUGE ink stain on many of his dress shirts. And yes, I know he's done some weird stuff in his life (alchemy, anyone?! - http://www.spectrometer.org/path/free.html).
Forget cold fusion -- (Score:3, Interesting)
I saw a paper once which even offered up the possibility of non-radioactive nano-fusion -- boron and carbon, I think.
Re:"Still gets the cold shoulder" (Score:5, Interesting)
Nonsense like this breaks out periodically in physics. Remember polywater? The '14 KeV neutrino'? The 'fifth force'? The 'Allison Effect'? 'N rays'? All of these were big in their day, but died away because there turned out not to be anything there.
Re:Two independent issues. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Cold Fusion experiments for everyone... (Score:2, Interesting)
So if one could stick an alternator and condensator on the reactor and plug it on the reactor's input, it could very well run for days or months, until whatever "fuel" it is using is depleted, all the while producing extra "free" power (somewhere around 200 W for a 2 liter reactor, my own gross estimate).
Re:Old Cold Fusion Stuff (Score:4, Interesting)
"We do not know if Cold Fusion will be the answer to future energy needs, but we do know the existence of Cold Fusion phenomenon through repeated observations by scientists throughout the world. It is time that this phenomenon be investigated so that we can reap whatever benefits accrue from additional scientific understanding."
I am fairly skeptical of extraordinary claims, but if the US military has researchers writing things like this, I'm definitely willing to listen.
the engineers need the scientists (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:"Still gets the cold shoulder" (Score:5, Interesting)
What about aneutronic fission? (Score:1, Interesting)
Now how about we give Bogdan Maglich a few million to finish his Migma experiments [nuenergy.org]?
Here's a scary thought: do you think some lines of fusion research have been suppressed because they could lead to "pure" fusion bombs (H-bombs without an A-bomb trigger)?
"cold fusion" was inept bullshit, period (Score:2, Interesting)
that's like saying if I didn't have to spend a trillion dollars to fly to the moon, I'd do it monthly. if M$ didn't have bugs and undocumented exploits, they'd be putting out stable software. if I don't care about rules and science, I can convince myself that anything is possible, like making Buicks from shaving cream and squirrel hair.
it's a collection of failed experiments poorly calculated with no controls, and a few Jack Daniels insights.
read "Bad Science" by Gary Taubes, ISBN 0-394-58456-2, or "Voodoo Science" by Robert Park, ISBN 0-19-513515-6.
there is no wiggle room, Pons and Fleischman have been caught like shined deer in a scam. the "experiment" never was, the results never happened, and being non-reproduceable is the correct result.
"believers" need medical help and tutoring in 3rd grade science.
Re:"Still gets the cold shoulder" (Score:3, Interesting)
Anyway, if scientists still are going for it ten years after the facts, risking their careers, I can't think nothing is going on. Think twice, quite a lot of what are accepted facts nowadays where called totally outrageous and ungrounded at the time they were published. History teaches us not to dismiss something at first sight, even if it seems totally outrageous.
Re:Chain Reaction (Score:3, Interesting)
I am talking about the ability for a single crazy person to kill many people by himself.
For instance, long ago when the only personal weapons we had were sticks and rocks, it was hard to kill single person, and in the meantime someone would stop the attacker.
Then we had swords. A single person with a sword can kill more effectively with a sword and would require an opponent with a sword to stop him.
Now we have personal firearms. A single person can kill a whole bunch of people before he is taken out by the SWAT team.
The current fission products are not quite enough, it requires many people's involvement to fire one off. A single crazy person can't do this, and does not have the capability to do so.
However, once effectively 'free' energy is available, everything changes.
Give the hateful suicidal crazy person free energy, and instead of constructive, effective changes, you will see HUGE amounts of innocent people die because of his decisions before he could be stopped.
What happens next when I can wear a cheap mega-watt generator device on my back that is powering a hand-held magnetron that I can aim at people from a distance? Would YOU give everyone the tools to do this?
--jeff++
Re:This is the way it's always been... (Score:1, Interesting)
You don't retain a set percentage of all the calories you consume. It depends entirely on what you eat. Carbohydrates are very easy to metabolize, so they do tend to map very close to 1-to-1. Fats and proteins are a very different story.
The biggest problem with consuming fats like cholesterol is that they're very complex molecules. What you ingest is often damaged from meal preparation and cooking, such as bad cholesterol. Your body will use what it gets if it has to, but with a surplus it will fill its needs with good cholesterol first and actually discard excess bad cholesterol.
The body is surprisingly good at taking care of itself, provided its needs are being properly met.
A&M claimed it, too. (Score:2, Interesting)
People tend to forget that Texas A&M claimed to be able to produce Cold Fusion, too, shortly after the Utah "discoveries."
Folks in the lab had t-shirts that said "I might have discovered cold fusion and all I got was this lousy t-shirt"
Re:"Still gets the cold shoulder" (Score:3, Interesting)
They see what they see, and they have plenty of evidence for it. What they don't know is exactly what it is. Either it is a chemical reaction that produces heat in levels that are factors of ten higher than should be possible for chemical reactions, or it is a nuclear reaction started in a way that shouldn't be possible for nuclear reactions. Either way, the phenomenon is worth investigating, even if everybody gets up in arms just when they hear the name.
Perhaps people should get over the fact that they (perhaps foolishly) decided to call it "Cold Fusion" and look at the phenomenon itself.
Re:"Still gets the cold shoulder" (Score:3, Interesting)
While there is some data to be found, the lack of theory isn't necessarily a problem.
After all, Volta never lived to learn about the electron.