FlexGunship said:
So, if you want to bring two atom nuclei close enough to fuse, you have to invest enough energy to "bypass" the electromagnetic repulsion that protons from each nuclei exhibit against each other. Given that energy dissipates in a medium and approached equilibrium, there is a nearly zero chance that suddenly one atom will fuse with another and those chances decrease over time. You'll notice that most of his research requires the use of platinum. If I were to tell you that I could create free energy if you would just give me a pile of diamonds, would you be skeptical?
Followed this topic over from the chemistry sub-forum. Just had one comment to make.
Out of all of the reasons to be skeptical of Miley, the fact he uses platinum in his experiments is the most specious of reasons. Using platinum as a catalyst in a reaction for cold fusion is not the same as using diamonds in generating free energy.
Platinum is a common metal for capturing hydrogen for use in various organometallic catalytic cycles, as it's good at attaching hydrogen to its surface. Deuterium is similarly able to attach to the surface of the platinum. The idea here is trying to increase the deuterium density on the surface of the metal high enough that it is able to trigger a fusion reaction between the deuterium.
The trick is how to alter the geometry of the metal surface enough to pack the hydrogen in more densely. One method that's been attempted was pitting the surface of the metal, in the case of that experiment I believe gold was used instead, thus creating small cavities just capable of packing a few dozen atoms of deuterium into it. Pack them in there, dump your starting energy into the system, and hopefully you'll trigger the deuterium in those cavities to fuse.
So platinum and gold are two good metals for doing this with, because of their affinity for binding hydrogen/deuterium to their surfaces.
I haven't seen the results yet, but at the March conference for the American Chemical Society, there was a series of lectures on cold fusion, and progress made in the field in the last 20 years (mostly done in secret by well established scientists, as the whole Fleischmann and Pons scandal made it untouchable to funding agencies in the last 20 years).
So yeah, being skeptical of George Miley is fine, being skeptical because he uses platinum was a catalyst is silly--it's a good starting point when the goal of your experiment is to pack hydrogen/deuterium together as tightly as possible.