Safety: Lithium Intoxication - Lithium Side Effects ?


  • There is not a factor 104 between 58Ni and Se, more like a factor of
    20. But let's forget about Se, I don't know why that got into the
    discussion.


    I find your comments defensive and negative. If p+7Li is important in a
    LENR reactor, measuring gammas would be the ultimate proof that there is
    a reaction and the gamma yield would give a handle on the excess
    energy. That would convince even the hardcore nuclear physicists that
    you have got something! It would definitely be a good signal. Even a
    negative result would be of interest since it would give a rather
    stringent upper limit of the p+7Li contribution.


    We may be willing to measure a alpha+Ni gamma spectrum at our accelerator with
    the 2011 Rossi fuel samples (thick target yields, as in Stelson).


    Lets calculate an estimate of the count rate of the 1454.2 keV
    58Ni(2+->0+) transition
    . (You can renormalise the final result if you
    prefer other assumptions.)


    Reaction: p+7Li-->2 alpha Q=17.347 MeV.


    Alpha energy = 17.347/2=8.67 MeV (all excess energy goes into kinetic energy of the alphas).


    Excess energy from the reaction above: 100 W.


    Number of alphas per second: 100/(8.67*106*1.6*10-19)=100*1013/(8.67*1.6)=7.2*1013 /s.


    Equivalent current: I=N*q*e=7.2*1013*2*1.6*10-19*106=23 microA



    So we have 23 microC per second.


    The yield of 58Ni was 9.38*104 (Stelson, table 1, 7% uncertainty, E=8.013 MeV, close to alpha energy above).


    Correcting for natural abundance of 58Ni: (0.68/0.996)*9.38*104= 64000.


    Total activity (only 58Ni) is 23*64000=15*105 /s=15*105/(3.7*104)=40 microCi,
    which is much more than a standard source (1 microCi). There is
    obviously reason to take safety precautions.


    A conservative photo peak efficiency of 1% would yield 15000 counts/s. That is probably more than the detector can handle!


    I realize that this is, if I have the sums right, as popular as the proposal to demote Pluto to a dwarf planet! :(

  • @ Peter Ekstrom


    Forgive me if I sounded defensive to you. I am an experimentalist and thus have become used to supporting my data against critical analysis (especially in fora such as this one).


    Thank you for your calculation of expected alpha energy yields and counts for the p+7Li reactions. I can only say that our recent experiment with three separate gamma spectrometers in place showed no evidence to support these reaction paths. We have not yet finished analysis of the saved spectra, and subtraction of background may still show a signal from the alpha excitation of Ni.

  • Forgive me if I sounded defensive to you. I am an experimentalist and thus have become used to supporting my data against critical analysis (especially in fora such as this one).


    Thank you for your calculation of expected alpha energy yields and counts for the P+7Li reactions. I can only say that our recent experiment with three separate gamma spectrometers in place showed no evidence to support these reaction paths. We have not yet finished analysis of the saved spectra, and subtraction of background may still show a signal from the alpha excitation of Ni.


    OK, no problem. I am also experimentalist and quite experienced in nuclear measurements.


    I think, however, that one can safely exclude a reaction with Li. The reason I started looking into the Li reactions was that Cook and Rossi (Cook with the cookbook) say in their paper that the Li reaction is involved and that it is "gamma free". The disappearing 7Li supports the reaction, but it is by no means gamma free.

  • I think, however, that one can safely exclude a reaction with Li. The reason I started looking into the Li reactions was that Cook and Rossi (Cook with the cookbook) say in their paper that the Li reaction is involved and that it is "gamma free". The disappearing 7Li supports the reaction, but it is by no means gamma free.


    Is this meant from the classical nuclear physics point of view?


    Or would You it also exclude under a LENR 'cluster-reaction' view point?

  • Is this meant from the classical nuclear physics point of view?


    Or would You it also exclude under a LENR 'cluster-reaction' view point?


    I do not believe in rewriting nuclear physics completely. As I said before, nuclear physicists are not idiots. As long as the LENR community invents another exception for each new problem, it will never make progress. Physics is not like that - Physics is beautiful and simple! :)

  • Reality, having heard this over the centuries, may suspect one should not become too enamored of "beauty". Standards change, one era's beauty can become another era's abomination. And what of simplicity? Is it parsimony of expression? Or a minimalist tensor? Occam's razor can cut the throat of truth in the interests of simplicity.

  • Ockham did not suggest "that the hypothesis that is simplest is better". He asked, what is the minimum number of assumptions needed to make a a hypothesis consistent and testable". A hypothesis with a hundred variables could easily be true, but how can one narrow that down to something that can be either invalidated or demonstrated to require more detail? The hypothesis that is simpler is easier to test.

    The razor shaves, it is not Ockham's Cleaver.

  • Without looking at his writings in latin, I well venture here that you are reading way too much into Occam's commentaries. Further I did not write anything to justly elicit your comment. Out of courtesy to you and others I respond here. Remembering that this man Wiilliam of Ockham (Occam) was finished writing in the early 1300's. No doubt a brilliant eccliastical scholar for the day and a metaphysician of sorts, but certainly not writing seriously of hypothesis testing in a scientific sense. [That was Francis Bacon, nearly 300 years later!]


    On Ockham, from the Stanford University Encyclopedia of Philosophy http://plato.stanford.edu/ :


    "An emphasis on reducing one's ontology to a bare minimum, on paring down the supply of fundamental ontological categories. Ockham was likewise a nominalist in this sense."


    "He did not believe in mathematical (“quantitative”) entities of any kind."


    Finally we are talking not only of an early 14th century ecclesiast given to apodict, but also one who is deeply and dogmatically religious:


    'As he says in Sent. I, dist. 30, q. 1: “For
    nothing ought to be posited without a reason given, unless it is
    self-evident (literally, known through itself) or known by
    experience or proved by the authority of Sacred Scripture.”'

    But, of course you, Paradigmnoia, already know this, perhaps others can gain from our little exposition.


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