Uncovering the Truth Behind Cold Fusion: Separating Fact from Fiction

  • Thread starter FUNKER
  • Start date
  • Tags
    Cold
In summary, the idea of cold fusion as a potential source of abundant energy has not been successful due to flawed experiments and the inability to produce any evidence that it works. The two main approaches to cold fusion, electrolytic and muonic, have both faced challenges and limitations. The term "cold fusion" itself is debated and often considered an oxymoron. There have been attempts to achieve cold fusion through collapsing air bubbles within hydrogen-rich hydrocarbons, but these experiments have not been independently corroborated. Due to past false and misreported results, the field of cold fusion has become taboo for many scientists.
  • #1
FUNKER
121
0
So what is the deal with cold fusion these days what is hindering the progress of an ubundace of energy?
Please Explain
[?]
 
Physics news on Phys.org
  • #2
Basically, what's hindering the development of cold fusion reactors that will give us an abundance of energy is that it doesn't work!

The original experiments were flawed and no one has been able to produce any evidence that cold fusion works.
 
  • #3
Its too greater' theory to live down and cast off i believe, this is just history repeating itself, 'We will never be able to fly' etc.
 
  • #4
There are two main approaches to cold fusion: electrolytic and muonic.

The electrolytic approach was the subject of a hoax/poor scientific method whioch generated a lot of hype at the time, it's now generally agreed that it is physically impossible to achieve cold fusion via this method. As far as I know it is possible to achieve cold fusion using the muonic method, but it really isn't pratical due to the very short half-life of muons.
 
  • #5
Originally posted by jcsd
The electrolytic approach was the subject of a hoax/poor scientific method whioch generated a lot of hype at the time, it's now generally agreed that it is physically impossible to achieve cold fusion via this method.
I have argued that the very term "cold fusion" (or how about "chemically catalyzed fusion"?)is a contradiction. I can't remember who now (may even have been in a different forum), but someone argued that though the water bath could be at room temp, some atoms could still reach energies required for fusion. I don't buy that and still consider it an oxymoron. Otherwise you could define your system to as big as you want and at some point, the system as a whole can be considered "cold." In my view, if the individual atoms fusing together are of an energy level associated with fusion, that's "hot" fusion. In "cold" fusion, it appears the goal (current websites are sufficiently vague there is some question here) was to get the individual atoms to fuse at energy levels not normally associated with fusion: a physical impossibility like you said.

In any case, I haven't heard of the muonic method.

Its too greater' theory to live down and cast off i believe, this is just history repeating itself, 'We will never be able to fly' etc.
The sound barrier and flight itself are often touted as examples of science saying something is "impossible" only to be proven wrong. This is NOT the case. Scientists always knew that flight and supersonic flight were theoretically possible, after all, we've seen birds fly and bullets have been supersonic for about as long as we knew of the sound barrier. The problem was always an ENGINEERING one.

So to be concise:
-Engineering barrier: we don't know how to do it yet but know it can be done.
-Physical/theoretical barrier: the laws of physics prevent it.

Cold fusion falls under the second category.
 
  • #6
My physics is a little rusty compared to some of the others on the board, but I heard about work which involved acetone or some other hydrogen-rich hydrocarbon (IIRC) and collapsing air bubbles within it. Apparently, viscous effects aside, the collapsing bubbles would generate temperatures sufficient to initiate fusion as their radius tends to zero. From what I remember, the scientists who did work on it reported a steady stream of neutrons (apparently a sign of fusion) but it has not been independently corroborated. People are questioning as to whether there was a mistake/malfunction in the original researchers technique/apparatus, or if the others trying to duplicate the results actually did duplicate it exactly.

Russ, to comment on what you said regarding the superfluous nature of the hot/cold fusion label, I agree in its current state it is a bit ambiguous, but I think the temperature label applies to your supposed reacting fuel. So for a Tokamak it would be the confined hydrogen, for an acetone-based experiment, the acetone sitting in the beaker.

A lot of scientists also don't want to get involved in that field, because after all the false/misreported results, it has become quite taboo. Personally, I am hedging my bets.
 
  • #7
Originally posted by Tyro
My physics is a little rusty compared to some of the others on the board, but I heard about work which involved acetone or some other hydrogen-rich hydrocarbon (IIRC) and collapsing air bubbles within it. Apparently, viscous effects aside, the collapsing bubbles would generate temperatures sufficient to initiate fusion as their radius tends to zero. From what I remember, the scientists who did work on it reported a steady stream of neutrons (apparently a sign of fusion) but it has not been independently corroborated. People are questioning as to whether there was a mistake/malfunction in the original researchers technique/apparatus, or if the others trying to duplicate the results actually did duplicate it exactly.

Russ, to comment on what you said regarding the superfluous nature of the hot/cold fusion label, I agree in its current state it is a bit ambiguous, but I think the temperature label applies to your supposed reacting fuel. So for a Tokamak it would be the confined hydrogen, for an acetone-based experiment, the acetone sitting in the beaker.

A lot of scientists also don't want to get involved in that field, because after all the false/misreported results, it has become quite taboo. Personally, I am hedging my bets.

Getting fusion to occur on a lab bench has been done decades ago. The trick is getting it to break even, and this sonoluminesence experiment you cite never even came close. And to my knowledge this was never duplicated anways.
 
  • #8
Originally posted by russ_watters
(SNIP) I have argued that the very term "cold fusion" (or how about "chemically catalyzed fusion"?)is a contradiction. I can't remember who now (may even have been in a different forum), but someone argued that though the water bath could be at room temp, some atoms could still reach energies required for fusion. I don't buy that and still consider it an oxymoron. Otherwise you could define your system to as big as you want and at some point, the system as a whole can be considered "cold." In my view, if the individual atoms fusing together are of an energy level associated with fusion, that's "hot" fusion. In "cold" fusion, it appears the goal (current websites are sufficiently vague there is some question here) was to get the individual atoms to fuse at energy levels not normally associated with fusion: a physical impossibility like you said. (SNoP)
Humm, in chemistry there is a phenomenon wherein a proton captures and electron, becoming a neutron, low temps 9If I recall properly) sort of a form of a 'fusion' event, so maybe there are conditions we simply haven't found yet.

That is part of the problem, don't want to waste funding chasing a dead horse, don't want to 'kill' what might be "in the bag" (hidden) by not having spent the money to look, cause it might just be a really fast racehorse. (so to speak)

Research sometimes pays off the most by proving itself as un-rewarding, just that that takes time, as it is (sorta)like proving a negative.
 
  • #9
Humm, in chemistry there is a phenomenon wherein a proton captures and electron, becoming a neutron, low temps 9If I recall properly) sort of a form of a 'fusion' event, so maybe there are conditions we simply haven't found yet.

This is not a chemical process! It only happens for very energetic collisions. At ordinary temperatures, you simply get hydrogen.
 
  • #10
An interesting book dealing with this subject is "Bad Science: The Short Life and Weird Times of Cold Fusion," by Gary Taubes.

Be warned, he's sometimes not so nice to Pons and Fleischmann. Frankly, they deserve all the scorn they get.
 
  • #11
Originally posted by mathman
This is not a chemical process! It only happens for very energetic collisions. At ordinary temperatures, you simply get hydrogen.
Humm, aggressive responce, I said "in Chemistry" as I had learned that little tidbit of knowledge about the proton capturing electrons from My Chemistry Book so you have (sorta) 'shot off' in a (kinda) wrong direction, plus I never said the "cold fusion process" (which does produce hydrogen) in this 'reaction', it was seen as an occurance in a chemical reaction,(? Do I recall that properly?) and I suspect its been known of well before 'Cold Fusion' had ever been heard as words.
 
  • #12
the "cold fusion process" (which does produce hydrogen)

Could you clarify what you mean? Fusion processes start with hydrogen, deuterium, or tritium, and end up with heavier isotopes.
 
  • #13
Originally posted by mathman
Could you clarify what you mean? Fusion processes start with hydrogen, deuterium, or tritium, and end up with heavier isotopes.
I haven't specified 'cold' myself, simply looking at fusion, and there is a place wherein protons capture electrons, to become neutrons, NOT at elevated extremes of temp, NOT at elevated extremes of pressure, either (as I recall)...demonstrates that some of the inner nuclear particles do things we haven't yet understood/figured-out.
 
  • #14
so what exactly is MUONIC fusion?
(thats if I spelt it correctly):wink:
 
  • #15
Basically it uses a muonic hydrogen atom, where the atom's electron has been replaced by the electrons heavier cousin, the muon. A muonic atom has a smaller radius than an electronic atom, which menas that nuclei can get closer together aiding fusion, it also catalyses itself as more muons are produced when nuclei fuse, but the problem is muons have a very short half-life which greatly reduces the chain reaction.
 
  • #16
Greetings !
Originally posted by jcsd
Basically it uses a muonic hydrogen atom, where the atom's electron has been replaced by the electrons heavier cousin, the muon. A muonic atom has a smaller radius than an electronic atom, which menas that nuclei can get closer together aiding fusion, it also catalyses itself as more muons are produced when nuclei fuse, but the problem is muons have a very short half-life which greatly reduces the chain reaction.
But, hot fusion occurs in plasmas. What you're describing
is then a type of cold fusion ?

Also, anybody heard of any new advancements in particle accelerator
based fusion ?
I read some patents a while back and personally it seems
promising, of course, I know rather little on the subject.
I mean it's enough for you to accelerate deutirium at about 4 KeV
to get 1,000 times more energy from the fusion reaction, that
is, IF - and that's a big "IF", you can make a linear system in which
more than one of a phousand electron pairs will fuse - to allow
you to break even or use a circular accelerator with several
times lower collision rate and low energy losses.

Live long and prosper.
 
  • #17
Yes, muonic cold fusion is cold fusion. As I said before I really don't know the current scientific view on it's viabilty, though it does have the big problm of the muons incredibly short half-life.
 
  • #18
And a link to electron capture http://www.triumf.ca/safety/tsn/tsn_6_3/subsubsection3_4_2_3.html"
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #19
jcsd said:
Basically it uses a muonic hydrogen atom, where the atom's electron has been replaced by the electrons heavier cousin, the muon. A muonic atom has a smaller radius than an electronic atom, which means that nuclei can get closer together aiding fusion,
True.
it also catalyses itself as more muons are produced when nuclei fuse, but the problem is muons have a very short half-life which greatly reduces the chain reaction.

False. The fusion reaction releases many times less energy than is required to create another muon. The muon mass is http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muon" --- or only a bit more than 16% of the minimum energy required to produce another muon.

Moreover, for a collision to actually have a significant probability of producing another muon requires a "beam" energy closer to 1--3 GeV. (Muons are http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muon#Muon_sources" and pions are only copiously produced during high-energy collisions.)

However, the D+T reaction does release enough energy that the muon has a high probability of being freed from the alpha-particle reaction product, which allows it to carry out another cycle --- so in that sense, the reaction is "catalytic:" the muon increases the probability of a fusion reaction, without itself having a high probability of being "used up" during the process.

Current estimates are that a muon would need on the average to catalyze at least 200--500 reactions to achieve "breakeven" before it decays --- but unfortunately, this is larger than the average number of reactions allowed by the muon "sticking probability" (probability that the muon will not be freed from the alpha particle after the reaction).

There is a good discussion of muon-catalyzed fusion http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muon-catalyzed_fusion"
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #20
Just so you know that you are replying to a thread that had its last activity (till now) in 2003! I think the ship has left the port a loooooong time ago.

Zz.
 
  • #21
FUNKER said:
Its too greater' theory to live down and cast off i believe, this is just history repeating itself, 'We will never be able to fly' etc.
NO one is saying we can't produce energy- just that there is no evidence that this particular method works. Rather than saying "we will never be able to fly" it is saying "we will never be able to fly by just flapping our arms" or, even more accurately, "there is no current evidence that we will ever be able to fly just by flapping our arms"!
 

FAQ: Uncovering the Truth Behind Cold Fusion: Separating Fact from Fiction

1. What is cold fusion?

Cold fusion is a hypothetical type of nuclear reaction that would occur at or near room temperature, without the extreme temperatures and pressure normally required for nuclear reactions to take place.

2. Is cold fusion a real phenomenon?

There is much debate and controversy surrounding the existence of cold fusion. While some scientists claim to have achieved successful results, many others have been unable to replicate these results in their own experiments, leading to skepticism about its validity.

3. How does cold fusion differ from traditional nuclear fusion?

Cold fusion differs from traditional nuclear fusion in that it occurs at or near room temperature, whereas traditional fusion reactions require extremely high temperatures and pressure. Additionally, cold fusion is thought to produce little to no harmful radiation, while traditional fusion reactions produce a significant amount.

4. Why is cold fusion important?

If proven to be a valid phenomenon, cold fusion could potentially provide a virtually limitless source of clean energy, as it would not produce harmful radiation or greenhouse gases like traditional nuclear reactors. It could also potentially revolutionize the way we think about and use energy.

5. What are the challenges facing cold fusion research?

The main challenge facing cold fusion research is the lack of reproducibility of successful results. Until this phenomenon can be consistently replicated and verified by multiple independent sources, it will continue to face skepticism and criticism from the scientific community.

Similar threads

Replies
14
Views
12K
  • Poll
Replies
12
Views
603
Replies
9
Views
2K
Replies
1
Views
3K
Back
Top