New USPTO LENR Patent - Related to Cravens demos

  • United States Patent 9,631,866 - April 25, 2017

    Heat engine

    ABSTRACT: A heat engine that utilizes a controllable heat source that includes a body comprising a dopant that has an affinity for a fuel species, preferably a hydrogen isotope. The production of heat by the heat source can be modulated by the application of electric and/or magnetic fields to the body. The hear engine includes safety features that prevent excessive heat generation.


    http://patft.uspto.gov/netacgi…=pn/9631866&RS=PN/9631866


    Related to WIPO Patent Application WO/2016/022967

    - and probably the 2013 demo by Dennis Cravens at National Instuments

    • Official Post

    Very interesting.

    We didn't hear a lot from Cravens lately.


    Quote

    [...]
    In these studies the bodies are comprised of a zirconium-containing ceramic matrix that include approximately 170 .mu.g of a palladium dopant in the form of 2 nm to 4 nm particles. The studies are performed using discoidal bodies with a diameter of about 12 mm and a thickness of about 2 mm, which are fueled by exposure to deuterium gas at 1 atmosphere. Some studies include a control body that is identical to the test body but lacking in deuterium fuel. Both bodies are raised to an initial operating temperature of 300.degree. C. The temperature of each body is monitored and a feedback loop used to supply power to maintain each body at the operating temperature. A decrease in the power required to maintain the temperature of a test body relative to that of a control body is an indication of heat being generated by the test body.

    [...]

    A magnetic field originating from a permanent magnet and configured to initiate heat production as in the studies shown in FIG. 2 was applied as an operating field at the time point indicated as 310. The operating field was reconfigured (through rotation and vertical movement relative to the bodies) at the time point indicated as 320, resulting in a termination of heat production by the fueled body. Results from this experiment indicate power generation by the fueled body at 40 mW. Estimates based on the composition of the fueled bodies in the above studies indicate the power generation of a body containing 1 gram of palladium and fueled by deuterium approaching 1 kW or more when an appropriate operating field is applied.


    So 170 µg (0.00017 g) of fuel were able to yield 40 mW of excess heat!

  • Based on a quick once through of the patent the following can be noted:


    The patent primarily covers a generic device used to stimulate heat production (probably excess heat via LENR or cold fusion, although these words are not used) via magnetic and/or electric field application in any possible way (i.e. all combinations seem to be covered). This includes ways to terminate heat generation as well as initiate and sustain it. 18 claims are made, but most are electrical and mechanical as opposed to chemical (or nuclear).


    In claim 1, they specify the core of the device is made of "a body that is permeable to a fuel species and comprising a dopant that has an affinity for the fuel species". In claim 6 they claim "the dopant is selected from among the group consisting of nickel, platinum, and palladium." In claim 7 they claim "the fuel species is a hydrogen isotope." In the EXAMPLES section, they discuss "a zirconium-containing ceramic matrix that includes approximately 170 ug of a palladium dopant in the form of 2 nm to 4 nm particles". They run the system at 300 degrees C initially and they use a power compensation-type of calorimetry (i.e. they control the operating temperature to 300C and monitor power in, excess heat being indicated by less power being required to maintain 300C).


    They present 4 figures as evidence, but the figures are so fuzzy I cannot tell what the axes read. The text allows one to note that they basically are plots of powers in (to experimental and control bodies), power differences, and temperatures (presumably). All are apparently using time as the X axis. They do numerically label the figures and describe what the labels mean somewhat in the text. In Fig. 1 they claim to apply an electric field and get a temp increase of 0.2-0.3C. In Fig. 2A they use a magnetic field and show effects in the traces, but offer no quantitative info on what they mean. Fig 2B is a longer time period plot, which supposedly shows persistence of the effect. Fig. 3 is a plot of results from when they apply (apparently different) magnetic fields at 3 points. They note in the text that 40 mW excess power was detected.


    As is typical for a patent, this does not establish the validity of the claim that they are producing excess power. They simply state that as an assumed truth. I would need to see the evidence that they feel allows them to say this as 40 mW and 0.2-0.3 degree temperature shifts can easily be noise.


    But they do seem to cover every possibility for building a device if they really do have a heat generator at its core.


    Disclaimer: These are my observations based on a once-through read. Therefore it's entirely possible I misread and/or mis-stated something. Let me know if you spot an error.

  • This patent covers nicely the leap of hope needed here. The observed 40mW effect (which looks to me also probably impossible to distinguish from noise) is 0.2C on 300C. You can't tell from that what it is as a percentage of applied power. The system is a fuel disk 12mm X 2mm and 8E-7m^3. If the main heat loss is conductive to something near ambient we have a fraction 0.1% of the heating power.


    They mention scaling this up to 1kW, from a few grams of reactive material. That is an enormous leap since this fuel disk showing a claimed 40mW is a few grams, but I guess the working hypothesis would be that this is a surface effect. In that case, though, it is the areal power density that should be quoted.

    • Official Post

    They mention scaling this up to 1kW, from a few grams of reactive material.


    I think this is not a huge leap in terms of how much Palladium is used. As for Zeolite surface area, you are almost certainly right. But there is little reason to assume that Cravens can only use Zeolite discs, as Zeolite is a very common catalyst framework material and a hydrogenation catalyst in its own right, there are many many different forms available with hugely favourable surface area/mass ratios.

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