That photo data seems to be for the borrowed lab photo.
I can't seem to pull any date metadata from the Mizuno calorimeter photo, (other than the Nov 2016 calendar).
August 2017.
August 11 is the "Mountain Day", national holiday.
That photo data seems to be for the borrowed lab photo.
I can't seem to pull any date metadata from the Mizuno calorimeter photo, (other than the Nov 2016 calendar).
August 2017.
August 11 is the "Mountain Day", national holiday.
. No secure IP, no money, no company.
No money... $2 million dollars is just small change... and 2 years is a blink..
August 2017.
August 11 is the "Mountain Day", national holiday.
what’s the 27 th, then?
what’s the 27 th, then?
The last Sunday of August 2017.
The last Sunday of August 2017.
In November 2016 it is the beginning of Advent.
In November 2016 it is the beginning of Advent.
Day 27 is red because it is a Sunday, and is on the first column, as in the English calendar.
The revealing red date is 11, a Friday. You have two national day in the 11th days of a month: February 11 (National Foundation Day) and August 11 (Mountain Day), a recent holiday established since 2014. But Mizuno's shirt suggests iy was summer, and the last Febray 11 which was a Friday happened in 2011.
Catalytic converter prototypes were first designed in France at the end of the 19th century, when only a few thousand "oil cars" were on the roads; it was constituted of an inert material coated with platinum, iridium, and palladium, sealed into a double metallic cylinder.[6]
A few decades later, a catalytic converter was patented by Eugene Houdry, a French mechanical engineer and expert in catalytic oil refining,[7] who moved to the United States in 1930. When the results of early studies of smog in Los Angeles were published, Houdry became concerned about the role of smokestack exhaust and automobile exhaust in air pollution and founded a company called Oxy-Catalyst. Houdry first developed catalytic converters for smokestacks called "cats" for short, and later developed catalytic converters for warehouse forklifts that used low grade, unleaded gasoline.[8] In the mid-1950s, he began research to develop catalytic converters for gasoline engines used on cars. He was awarded United States Patent 2,742,437 for his work.[9]
Widespread adoption of catalytic converters did not occur until more stringent emission control regulations forced the removal of the antiknock agent tetraethyl lead from most types of gasoline. Lead is a catalyst poison and would effectively disable a catalytic converter by forming a coating on the catalyst's surface.[10]
Catalytic converters were further developed by a series of engineers including Carl D. Keith, John J. Mooney, Antonio Eleazar, and Phillip Messina at Engelhard Corporation,[11] creating the first production catalytic converter in 1973.[12]
William C. Pfefferle developed a catalytic combustor for gas turbines in the early 1970s, allowing combustion without significant formation of nitrogen oxides and carbon monoxide.[13][14]
etc etc
Day 27 is red because it is a Sunday, and is on the first column, as in the English calendar.
The revealing red date is 11, a Friday. You have two national day in the 11th days of a month: February 11 (National Foundation Day) and August 11 (Mountain Day), a recent holiday established since 2014. But Mizuno's shirt suggests iy was summer, and the last Febray 11 which was a Friday happened in 2011.
Sounds reasonable.
The Mizuno patent application linked above appears to be for an apparatus distinct from the R20 system as described to us. It seems to be an externally similar cell, but with provision for high voltage sputtering from a Pd wire wound on a central support, onto the shell of the chamber, which may be a mesh or other form of Nickel. The disclosure in this forum of the "burnishing" method and other details of the R20 cell predates the patent application and thus probably not covered by it. I wish David French was still with us to put it in perspective!
The Mizuno patent application linked above appears to be for an apparatus distinct from the R20
The schematic is the same as on the Ih patent app.W020190166061
I think R20 postdates this schematic by a year or two..?
https://worldwide.espacenet.co…6A1?q=pn%3DWO2019016606A1
0003] This application claims priority to US Provisional Patent Applications No. 62/534,762 filed on July 20, 2017, entitled APPARATUS FOR ..
Seems like a more direct heating/stimulation method than the 'original' heating set up.
Display MoreThe schematic is the same as on the Ih patent app.W020190166061
I think R20 postdates this schematic by a year or two..?
https://worldwide.espacenet.co…6A1?q=pn%3DWO2019016606A1
0003] This application claims priority to US Provisional Patent Applications No. 62/534,762 filed on July 20, 2017, entitled APPARATUS FOR ..
supercritical CO2?
The website says the thermal output could be used
for steam
"or to spin super-critical CO2 turbines for producing combined heat and power (CHP)"
Its better than BLP's magnetohydrodynamic throw of the dice.
at least there are a few working prototypes..
https://www.engineersaustralia…maller-and-more-efficient
I don't think Tadahiko had a say in much that was written on the website..
I don't think Tadahiko had a say in much that was written on the website..
No he did not. They agreed that one was needed so a team member (not an HTML expert by any means) rustled up a placeholder site - which will be updated as time permits.
"For a heating input of 100W, generates 200W of heat (a higher rate output device under development)"
It seems to be an externally similar cell, but with provision for high voltage sputtering from a Pd wire wound on a central support, onto the shell of the chamber, which may be a mesh or other form of Nickel. The disclosure in this forum of the "burnishing" method and other details of the R20 cell predates the patent application and thus probably not covered by it.
For somebody understanding LENR it was obvious that the stuff Jed presented here in LENR forum was partly fake to divert the experimenters. My advice from the beginning was to use sputtering for Pd deposition. But even then you have to know some more tricks to make it running.
Or co-deposition?
News May 2020 issue
Another good find. To put this all together, and add to what Alan already mentioned. The Mizuno Technologies Inc. (MTI) website is real, and admittedly "slapped together" by one of the team members, who is not an expert at web design. They do not intend to make it snazzier anytime soon, as it suits their purpose of a low level, modest appeal to investors. There will be no photos of the developing product, for fear it will give away IP.
The article Ahlfors linked to, is an interview with Masao Muto, He is President of another company called "Hokkai Kodenshi" (HPEEM is an acronym of the English Translation of Hokkai Koden. -Hokkaido Photo Electron Emission Microscope Co. Ltd), and also a Faculty of Hokkaido University Engineering Department. I suggest you read the article: https://www.lenr-forum.com/attachment/12622-snap4-jpg/
Muto met Mizuno a few years ago, was impressed with what he was doing, and in 2018 began a full research effort. He "succeeded in a low temperature fusion reaction of several hundred degrees". It gets a little murky as to how Mizuno's old company HEADS, his new one MTI, will interact with Muto's company moving forward on the R/D. We are told that relationship will remain murky for the time being.
Piecing this together, so if anyone has something to add/subtract...please feel free to do so.
Edited 2 June to make a correction.
What year did Mizuno begin adding the bubble foil to the calorimeter box?