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India to Restart Cold Fusion Research Programme?

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Modi government urged to revive cold fusion

Some top nuclear scientists are urging India's new government to revive research on "cold fusion", saying it has the potential to provide answers to the country's energy problem.

In the 1990s, the Bhabha Atomic Research Centre (BARC) in Mumbai had done some work on cold fusion -- now called Low Energy Nuclear Reactions or LENR -- but abandoned the research 18 years ago.

"We are making a frantic effort to revive cold fusion/LENR research in India," Mahadevan Srinivasan, who along with the late P.K.Iyengar led cold fusion research at BARC, told IANS. "Former Atomic Energy Commission chairman Srikumar Banerjee is solidly backing me (in this effort)."

The journal "Current Science" published by Bangalore-based Indian Academy of Sciences has proposed to bring out a special section on cold fusion in one of the upcoming issues with contributions from scientists working in this field.

"I am trying to get Prime Minister (Narendra) Modi (to) appoint a task force to investigate cold fusion and advise him on a course of action," Srinivasan said, adding he had had a one-on-one meeting with Energy Minister Piyush Goel last week on this topic.

Thermonuclear fusion process -- like the one that powers the Sun -- takes place under extreme temperature in which hydrogen (or its heavier cousins deuterium and tritium) nuclei fuse to release energy.

On March 23, 1989, Martin Fleischmann and Stanley Pons at the University of Utah in the US startled the world with their claim of having observed fusion between deuterium nuclei in a palladium lattice at room temperature.

But mainstream Scientists worldwide rejected these claims of room temperature fusion and dismissed the experimental findings as "erroneous".

The BARC team which replicated the work in early 1990s showed that the reaction studied by the Utah physicists indeed produced tritium as well as helium indicating that cold fusion was real.

But further work on cold fusion in BARC was shut down "under global peer pressure", Srinivasan said.


According to Srinivasan, research on cold fusion needs to be revived now since "very interesting things are happening in this field" and people like Bill Gates -- who Nov 12 visited the Italian laboratory to observe LENR experiments being carried out there -- were "seriously considering funding cold fusion/LENR".

Srinivasan said that recent technological breakthroughs had resulted in the development of suitcase-sized LENR reactors that can be mass produced.

The fuel for these novel "reactors" -- dubbed Energy Catalyzer or "Ecat" by its Italian inventor Andrea Rossi -- is inexpensive nickel in the form of specially prepared "nano" powder exposed to ordinary hydrogen gas.

Rossi gave a demonstration of a 10-KW unit at the University of Bologna in January 2011 in the presence of about 50 invitees. He followed it up with a demonstration of a 1-MW water boiler, Srinivasan said.

"Since Rossi has not published his work in the form of scientific papers in journals, the mainstream scientific community is not aware of this development."

Srinivasan said a research centre and possible manufacturing base for these reactors have been set up in Baoding in eastern China and that at least two companies have announced likely market release of multi-KW LENR reactors during 2015.

"One such LENR generator located in each village and powering a local village-level micro-grid can work wonders," says Srinivasan, adding one can even envision tractors being powered by LENR source in future.

"It is hoped that the new government will take cognition of this breakthrough development and take necessary steps to foster this new technology in India," he said.


Source:- Modi government urged to revive cold fusion | Business Standard News
 
BARC Studies In Cold Fusion

The Bhabha Atomic Research Centre (BARC) in Trombay is India’s premier nuclear research center, “with expertise covering the entire spectrum of Nuclear Science and Engineering and related areas” (Bhabha Atomic Research Centre ( BARC )). From 1989 through 1994, some of the best cold fusion research ever published was performed at BARC, under the leadership of the Center’s director Dr. P. K. Iyengar. In December 1989, as the first round of experiments was completed, the center published a book: Iyengar, P.K. and M. Srinivasan, BARC Studies In Cold Fusion, BARC-1500. 1989, Government of India, Atomic Energy Commission: Bombay.

The LENR-CANR.org library includes several papers from the book, as well as papers published by BARC researchers elsewhere.

Dr. Iyengar later went on to became the Chairman of India’s Atomic Energy Commission. Unfortunately, after he left BARC, and Dr. Srinivasan and others retired, conservative scientists who opposed cold fusion brought the research to an end.

However, a dramatic turnaround may be underway in early 2008. A discussion meeting was held at the National Insitute of Advanced Studies (NIAS) in Bangalore, on January 9, 2008. Mahadeva Srinivasan reports that many senior scientists “gathered to take stock of the status of cold fusion” at this meeting, and: “The meeting concluded on a very positive note resolving to send a formal recommendation to the office of the Chief Scientific Advisor to the cabinet in Delhi, namely Dr. R. Chidambaram that cold fusion research be funded adequately.”

NatureINDIA published an on-line article describing the NIAS meeting by K. S. Jayaraman, “Cold fusion hot again.” The article quotes P. K. Iyengar: “‘We did great injustice to the country by stopping the research that was going on at the Bhabha Atomic Research Centre BARC),’ Padmanabha Krishnagopala Iyengar, considered the father of cold fusion in India, told Nature India . Iyengar, former director of BARC, who could not attend the meeting, said on phone that India had lost out 15 years by this wrong move but even now ‘it is not too late to revive it.'” The meeting was also described by M. Srinivsan in Current Science, “Meeting Report — Energy Concepts for the 21st Century.”

Michael McKubre (SRI) reported that: “The interactions we had with Indian scientists, politicians and businessmen were in every instance and degree more positive and substantive than I had any reason to dream possible. . . . India is ready to roar!”

Here is an autoradiograph from BARC. For a larger image and more information see: “A Look At Experiments.”

Autoradiograph200dpi.jpg

A Polaroid autoradiograph from M. Srinivasan, Neutron Physics Division (ret.), Bhabha Atomic Research Centre, Bombay, India. Click for larger image.
Informal Overview
Here is an informal interview with Srinivasan, conducted by Russ George: The Cold Fusion Phenomenon. This is an overview and a brief history of research at BARC.


BARCcover.jpg

The cover of the book BARC Studies In Cold Fusion, BARC-1500. Click for larger image.​
 
Modi government urged to revive cold fusion

Some top nuclear scientists are urging India's new government to revive research on "cold fusion", saying it has the potential to provide answers to the country's energy problem.

In the 1990s, the Bhabha Atomic Research Centre (BARC) in Mumbai had done some work on cold fusion -- now called Low Energy Nuclear Reactions or LENR -- but abandoned the research 18 years ago.

"We are making a frantic effort to revive cold fusion/LENR research in India," Mahadevan Srinivasan, who along with the late P.K.Iyengar led cold fusion research at BARC, told IANS. "Former Atomic Energy Commission chairman Srikumar Banerjee is solidly backing me (in this effort)."

The journal "Current Science" published by Bangalore-based Indian Academy of Sciences has proposed to bring out a special section on cold fusion in one of the upcoming issues with contributions from scientists working in this field.

"I am trying to get Prime Minister (Narendra) Modi (to) appoint a task force to investigate cold fusion and advise him on a course of action," Srinivasan said, adding he had had a one-on-one meeting with Energy Minister Piyush Goel last week on this topic.

Thermonuclear fusion process -- like the one that powers the Sun -- takes place under extreme temperature in which hydrogen (or its heavier cousins deuterium and tritium) nuclei fuse to release energy.

On March 23, 1989, Martin Fleischmann and Stanley Pons at the University of Utah in the US startled the world with their claim of having observed fusion between deuterium nuclei in a palladium lattice at room temperature.

But mainstream Scientists worldwide rejected these claims of room temperature fusion and dismissed the experimental findings as "erroneous".

The BARC team which replicated the work in early 1990s showed that the reaction studied by the Utah physicists indeed produced tritium as well as helium indicating that cold fusion was real.

But further work on cold fusion in BARC was shut down "under global peer pressure", Srinivasan said.


According to Srinivasan, research on cold fusion needs to be revived now since "very interesting things are happening in this field" and people like Bill Gates -- who Nov 12 visited the Italian laboratory to observe LENR experiments being carried out there -- were "seriously considering funding cold fusion/LENR".

Srinivasan said that recent technological breakthroughs had resulted in the development of suitcase-sized LENR reactors that can be mass produced.

The fuel for these novel "reactors" -- dubbed Energy Catalyzer or "Ecat" by its Italian inventor Andrea Rossi -- is inexpensive nickel in the form of specially prepared "nano" powder exposed to ordinary hydrogen gas.

Rossi gave a demonstration of a 10-KW unit at the University of Bologna in January 2011 in the presence of about 50 invitees. He followed it up with a demonstration of a 1-MW water boiler, Srinivasan said.

"Since Rossi has not published his work in the form of scientific papers in journals, the mainstream scientific community is not aware of this development."

Srinivasan said a research centre and possible manufacturing base for these reactors have been set up in Baoding in eastern China and that at least two companies have announced likely market release of multi-KW LENR reactors during 2015.

"One such LENR generator located in each village and powering a local village-level micro-grid can work wonders," says Srinivasan, adding one can even envision tractors being powered by LENR source in future.

"It is hoped that the new government will take cognition of this breakthrough development and take necessary steps to foster this new technology in India," he said.


Source:- Modi government urged to revive cold fusion | Business Standard News
Nice to know . Can you break it down . What is it actually. Wh a total will be the fuel ? What is the benefits over nuclear fusion reactors ?

Cold fusion
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This article is about the Fleischmann–Pons claims of nuclear fusion at room temperature, and subsequent research. For the original use of the term 'cold fusion', see Muon-catalyzed fusion. For all other definitions, seeCold fusion (disambiguation).

Diagram of an open-type calorimeter used at the New Hydrogen Energy Institute in Japan
Cold fusion is a hypothetical type ofnuclear reaction that would occur at, or near, room temperature, compared with temperatures in the millions of degrees that are required for "hot" fusion, which takes place naturally within stars. There is currently no accepted theoretical model which would allow cold fusion to occur.

In 1989 Martin Fleischmann (then one of the world's leading electrochemists) and Stanley Pons reported that their apparatus had produced anomalous heat ("excess heat"), of a magnitude they asserted would defy explanation except in terms of nuclear processes.[1]They further reported measuring small amounts of nuclear reaction byproducts, including neutrons andtritium.[2] The small tabletop experiment involved electrolysis of heavy water on the surface of a palladium (Pd) electrode.[3] The reported results received wide media attention,[3] and raised hopes of a cheap and abundant source of energy.[4]

Many scientists tried to replicate the experiment with the few details available. Hopes fell with the large number of negative replications, the withdrawal of many positive replications, the discovery of flaws and sources of experimental error in the original experiment, and finally the discovery that Fleischmann and Pons had not actually detected nuclear reaction byproducts.[5] By late 1989, most scientists considered cold fusion claims dead,[6][7] and cold fusion subsequently gained a reputation aspathological science.[8][9] In 1989, a review panel organized by the United States Department of Energy (DOE) found that the evidence for the discovery of a new nuclear process was not persuasive enough to start a special program, but was "sympathetic toward modest support" for experiments "within the present funding system." A second DOE review, convened in 2004 to look at new research, reached conclusions similar to the first.[10]Support within the then-present funding system did not occur.

A small community of researchers continues to investigate cold fusion,[6][11] now often preferring the designation low-energy nuclear reactions (LENR).[12][13] Since cold fusion articles are rarely published in peer-reviewed scientific journals, they do not attract the level of scrutiny expected for science.
 
Nice to know . Can you break it down . What is it actually. Wh a total will be the fuel ? What is the benefits over nuclear fusion reactors ?

Cold fusion is a hypothetical type of nuclear fusion reaction that would occur at, or near, room temperature, compared with temperatures in the millions of degrees that are required for "hot" fusion, which takes place naturally within stars.

Recent technological breakthroughs had resulted in the development of suitcase-sized LENR reactors that can be mass produced. One such LENR generator located in each village and powering a local village-level micro-grid can work wonders.

A research centre cum manufacturing base for these reactors have been set up in Baoding in eastern China and at least two companies have announced likely market release of multi-KW LENR reactors during 2015.

In other world something similar to Tony Stark's Arc Reactor :cheesy:
 
Criticism
Criticism of cold fusion claims generally take one of two forms: either pointing out the theoretical implausibility of the claims that fusion reactions have occurred in electrolysis set-ups or criticizing the excess heat measurements themselves as being spurious, erroneous, or due to poor methodology or controls.

Incompatibilities with known fusion reactions
There are many reasons why known fusion reactions are unlikely explanations for the excess heat and associated claims described above.[text 9]

Repulsion forces
Because nuclei are all positively charged, they strongly repel one another.[37] Normally, in the absence of a catalyst such as a muon, very high kinetic energies are required to overcome this repulsion.[144]Extrapolating from known fusion rates, the rate for uncatalyzed fusion at room-temperature energy would be 50 orders of magnitude lower than needed to account for the reported excess heat.[145]

In muon-catalyzed fusion there are more fusions because the presence of the muon causes deuterium nuclei to be 207 times closer than in ordinary deuterium gas.[146] But deuterium nuclei inside a palladium lattice are further apart than in deuterium gas, and there should be fewer fusion reactions, not more.[139]

Paneth and Peters in the 1920s already knew that palladium can absorb up to 900 times its own volume of hydrogen gas, storing it at several thousands of times the atmospheric pressure.[147]This led them to believe that they could increase the nuclear fusion rate by simply loading palladium rods with hydrogen gas.[147] Tandberg then tried the same experiment but used electrolysis to make palladium absorb more deuterium and force the deuterium further together inside the rods, thus anticipating the main elements of Fleischmann and Pons' experiment.[147][18] They all hoped that pairs of hydrogen nuclei would fuse together to form helium nuclei, which at the time were very needed in Germany to fill zeppelins, but no evidence of helium or of increased fusion rate was ever found.[147]

This was also the belief of geologist Palmer, who convinced Steven Jones that the helium-3 occurring naturally in Earth perhaps came from fusion involving hydrogen isotopes inside catalysts like nickel and palladium.[148]This led their team in 1986 to independently make the same experimental setup as Fleischmann and Pons (a palladium cathode submerged in heavy water, absorbing deuterium via electrolysis).[149] Fleischmann and Pons had much the same belief,[150] but they calculated the pressure to be of 1027atmospheres, when CF experiments only achieve a ratio of one to one, which only has between 10,000 and 20,000 atmospheres.[text 10] John R. Huizengasays they had misinterpreted the Nernst equation, leading them to believe that there was enough pressure to bring deuterons so close to each other that there would be spontaneous fusions.[151]

Lack of expected reaction products
Conventional deuteron fusion is a two-step process,[text 9] in which an unstable high energy intermediary is formed:

D + D → 4He * + 24 MeV
Experiments have observed only three decay pathways for this excited-state nucleus, with the branching ratio showing the probability that any given intermediate follows a particular pathway.[text 9] The products formed via these decay pathways are:

4He* → n + 3He + 3.3 MeV (ratio=50%)
4He* → p + 3H + 4.0 MeV (ratio=50%)
4He* → 4He + γ + 24 MeV (ratio=10−6)
Only about one in one million of the intermediaries decay along the third pathway, making its products comparatively rare when compared to the other paths.[37] This result is consistent with the predictions of theBohr model.[text 11] If one watt (1 eV = 1.602 x 10−19 joule) of nuclear power were produced from deuteron fusion consistent with known branching ratios, the resulting neutron and tritium (3H) production would be easily measured.[37][152] Some researchers reported detecting 4He but without the expected neutron or tritium production; such a result would require branching ratios strongly favouring the third pathway, with the actual rates of the first two pathways lower by at least five orders of magnitude than observations from other experiments, directly contradicting both theoretically predicted and observed branching probabilities.[text 9] Those reports of 4He production did not include detection ofgamma rays, which would require the third pathway to have been changed somehow so that gamma rays are no longer emitted.[text 9]

The known rate of the decay process together with the inter-atomic spacing in a metallic crystal makes heat transfer of the 24 MeV excess energy into the host metal lattice prior to theintermediary's decay inexplicable in terms of conventional understandings of momentum and energy transfer,[153]and even then we would see measurable levels of radiation.[154] Also, experiments indicate that the ratios of deuterium fusion remain constant at different energies.[155] In general, pressure and chemical environment only cause small changes to fusion ratios.[155] An early explanation invoked the Oppenheimer–Phillips process at low energies, but its magnitude was too small to explain the altered ratios.[156]

Setup of experiments
Cold fusion setups utilize an input power source (to ostensibly provideactivation energy), a platinum groupelectrode, a deuterium or hydrogen source, a calorimeter, and, at times, detectors to look for byproducts such as helium or neutrons. Critics have variously taken issue with each of these aspects and further assert that there has not yet been a consistent reproduction of claimed cold fusion results in either energy output or byproducts. Some cold fusion researchers who claim that they can consistently measure an excess heat effect have argued that the apparent lack of reproducibility might be attributable to a lack of quality control in the electrode metal or the amount of hydrogen or deuterium loaded in the system. Skeptics have further criticized what they describe as mistakes or errors of interpretation that cold fusion researchers have made in certain calorimetry analyses and energy budgets.

Reproducibility
In 1989, after Fleischmann and Pons had made their claims, many research groups tried to reproduce the Fleischmann-Pons experiment, without success. A few other research groups however reported successful reproductions of cold fusion during this time. In July 1989 an Indian group ofBARC (P. K. Iyengar and M. Srinivasan) and in October 1989 a team from USA (Bockris et al.) reported on creation of tritium. In December 1990 Professor Richard Oriani of Minnesota University reported excess heat.[157][notes 4]

Groups that did report successes found that some of their cells were producing the effect where other cells that were built exactly the same and used the same materials were not producing the effect.[158] Researchers that continued to work on the topic have claimed that over the years many successful replications have been made, but still have problems getting reliable replications.[159] Reproducibility is one of the main principles of the scientific method, and its lack led most physicists to believe that the few positive reports could be attributed to experimental error.[158][text 12] The DOE 2004 report said among its conclusions and recommendations:

"Ordinarily, new scientific discoveries are claimed to be consistent and reproducible; as a result, if the experiments are not complicated, the discovery can usually be confirmed or disproved in a few months. The claims of cold fusion, however, are unusual in that even the strongest proponents of cold fusion assert that the experiments, for unknown reasons, are not consistent and reproducible at the present time. (...) Internal inconsistencies and lack of predictability and reproducibility remain serious concerns. (...) The Panel recommends that the cold fusion research efforts in the area of heat production focus primarily on confirming or disproving reports of excess heat."[88]

As David Goodstein explains,[30]proponents say that the positive results with excess heat and neutron emission are enough to prove that the phenomenon was real, that negative results didn't count because they could be caused by flaws in the setup, and that you can't prove an idea false by simply having a negative replication. This is a reversal of Karl Popper'sfalsifiability, which says that you can't prove ideas true, never mind how many times your experiment is successful, and that a single negative experiment can prove your idea wrong.[30] Most scientists follow Popper's idea of falsifiability and discarded cold fusion as soon as they weren't able to replicate the effect in their own laboratory. Goodstein notes that he was impressed by a "particularly elegant, well designed experiment" and warns that by ignoring such results "science is not functioning normally." [30]

Loading ratio

Michael McKubre working on deuterium gas-based cold fusion cell used by SRI International.
Cold fusion researchers (McKubre since 1994,[159] ENEA in 2011[86]) have posited that a cell that was loaded with a deuterium/palladium ratio lower than 100% (or 1:1) would never produce excess heat.[159] Storms added in 1996 that the load ratio has to be maintained during many hours of electrolysis before the effects appear.[159] Since most of the negative replications in 1989–1990 didn't report their ratios, this has been proposed as an explanation for failed replications.[159]This loading ratio is tricky to obtain, and some batches of palladium never reach it because the pressure causes cracks in the palladium, allowing the deuterium to escape.[159] Unfortunately, Fleischmann and Pons never disclosed the deuterium/palladium ratio achieved in their cells,[160] there are no longer any batches of the palladium used by Fleischmann and Pons (because the supplier uses now a different manufacturing process),[159] and researchers still have problems finding batches of palladium that achieve heat production reliably.[159]

Misinterpretation of data
Some research groups initially reported that they had replicated the Fleischmann and Pons results but later retracted their reports and offered an alternative explanation for their original positive results. A group at Georgia Tech found problems with their neutron detector, and Texas A&M discovered bad wiring in their thermometers.[161]These retractions, combined with negative results from some famous laboratories,[6] led most scientists to conclude, as early as 1989, that no positive result should be attributed to cold fusion.[161][162]

Calorimetry errors
The calculation of excess heat in electrochemical cells involves certain assumptions.[163] Errors in these assumptions have been offered as non-nuclear explanations for excess heat.

One assumption made by Fleischmann and Pons is that the efficiency of electrolysis is nearly 100%, meaning nearly all the electricity applied to the cell resulted in electrolysis of water, with negligible resistive heating and substantially all the electrolysis product leaving the cell unchanged.[24] This assumption gives the amount of energy expended converting liquid D2O into gaseous D2 and O2.[164] The efficiency of electrolysis is less than one if hydrogen and oxygen recombine to a significant extent within the calorimeter. Several researchers have described potential mechanisms by which this process could occur and thereby account for excess heat in electrolysis experiments.[165][166][167]

Another assumption is that heat loss from the calorimeter maintains the same relationship with measured temperature as found when calibrating the calorimeter.[24] This assumption ceases to be accurate if the temperature distribution within the cell becomes significantly altered from the condition under which calibration measurements were made.[168] This can happen, for example, if fluid circulation within the cell becomes significantly altered.[169][170] Recombination of hydrogen and oxygen within the calorimeter would also alter the heat distribution and invalidate the calibration.[167][171][172]

According to John R. Huizenga, who co-chaired the DOE 1989 panel, if unexplained excess heat is not accompanied by a commensurate amount of nuclear products, then it must not be interpreted as nuclear in origin, but as a measuring error.[173]

Initial lack of control experiments
Control experiments are part of the scientific method to prove that the measured effects do not happen by chance, but are direct results of the experiment. One of the points of criticism of Fleischmann and Pons was the lack of control experiments

Cold fusion is a hypothetical type of nuclear fusion reaction that would occur at, or near, room temperature, compared with temperatures in the millions of degrees that are required for "hot" fusion, which takes place naturally within stars.

Recent technological breakthroughs had resulted in the development of suitcase-sized LENR reactors that can be mass produced. One such LENR generator located in each village and powering a local village-level micro-grid can work wonders.

A research centre cum manufacturing base for these reactors have been set up in Baoding in eastern China and at least two companies have announced likely market release of multi-KW LENR reactors during 2015.

In other world something similar to Tony Stark's Arc Reactor :cheesy:
It will be a revolutionary . Think about aircraft with small reactor ... :D

And Chinese already into it and going to mass production :taz: Manufacturing Ka bhap :hitwall:
 
Cold Fusion is a jade elephant right now.Too much unproved theories and too little technological base for it to be scientifically or commercially successful.Better stick to Thorium Research right now.
 
I think our best chance lies with Tokamak being developed by Institute of Plasma Research named Aditya
url.gif

Besides India is a part of ITER team (Consisting of US, EU, China, Japan, South Korea and Russia).
1662511985_1339496861.jpg
=== ITER - India ===

The project is funded by above nations and in all probability whenever Fusion power becomes commercially available, it is likely to be based on Hot fusion of Deuterium Tritium using Magnetic confinement method.
 
I think our best chance lies with Tokamak being developed by Institute of Plasma Research named Aditya
View attachment 189659
Besides India is a part of ITER team (Consisting of US, EU, China, Japan, South Korea and Russia).
View attachment 189662 === ITER - India ===

The project is funded by above nations and in all probability whenever Fusion power becomes commercially available, it is likely to be based on Hot fusion of Deuterium Tritium using Magnetic confinement method.

Not to forget SST-1 (steady state superconducting tokamak)!

knowledge-technology-projects-250x250.jpg

SST-1 (tokamak) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 
Cold Fusion is a jade elephant right now.Too much unproved theories and too little technological base for it to be scientifically or commercially successful.Better stick to Thorium Research right now.
--
all you point is the same reason to start it again..
once uranuium and thorium was on same level so its right time
 
So let me get this straight, certain powers put pressure on India to halt cold fusion research, but Italy and others are allowed to continue with even bill Gates visiting and promising to donate? Does this make sense?
 
I dont know if the following is the part of cold fusion or something else.
but i remember when I went to Ahmedabad PRL when I was in school,
They were talking about "Aaditya" - artificial sun like being built at the lab.

I also remember that ''the guide'' was saying that if this project get success than Ahmedabad will
provide electricity to whole India.
 
So let me get this straight, certain powers put pressure on India to halt cold fusion research, but Italy and others are allowed to continue with even bill Gates visiting and promising to donate? Does this make sense?
Well don't take those conspiracy theories seriously. The fact is India has committed itself to ITER program and conducting basic research on Plasma confinement. From engineering point of view, when say 50-60 years from now Fusion power is available for commercial deployment, it is most likely to be in form of Hot Fusion with electro-magnetic confinement and this is what India would have.
I also remember that ''the guide'' was saying that if this project get success than Ahmedabad will
provide electricity to whole India.

Sir i guess you are talking about Indian Plasma Research Institute. I heard a lecture at IIT Roorkee from a visiting faculty back in 1999 about works being done at IPR. I recall being told about 4 methods of initiating fusion and then plasma confinement in Torus shape. The most cutting edge research however involves electro-magnets that confine and shape plasma charge. These magnets require huge power supply and hence work on higher temperature super-conducting material is also underway.
& while it would be a hyperbole to say a city catering to country's electricity needs, the potential is immense as far as heat generation is concerned. The limitation offcourse would come from physical size of turbine and generators. As of now the biggest turbo generator sets are 1700 MWe.
 
Cold fusion is real, claim scientists

Bengaluru: Cold fusion, a revolutionary source of energy -- discovered 25 years ago but was cold-shouldered by mainstream physicists -- is now staging a comeback thanks to researchers who doggedly pursued the science behind it.

In a set of 34 peer-reviewed articles published recently in the journal "Current Science", nuclear scientists from a dozen nations including India, the US, China, Japan and France report that cold fusion was real and should be taken seriously.

"The goal of the set of papers is to place before the scientific community the latest findings of stalwarts working in this area," said Mahadeva Srinivasan, who co-edited the journal's special section on Low Energy Nuclear Reaction (LENR), the other name for cold fusion, along with US scientist A. Meulenberg of the Science for Humanity Trust in Georgia.

"What comes out of this review is that the phenomenon of LENR is real and by all accounts appears to have the potential for practical applications in the not-too-distant future," Srinivasan, a retired physicist of the Bhabha Atomic Research Centre (BARC) in Mumbai who was credited with the design of Purnima, precursor to India's fast reactor, told IANS.

Srinivasan, along with the late P.K. Iyengar, had pioneered cold fusion research at BARC before it was terminated in 1992.

Nuclear fusion is a process that powers the Sun and forms the basis of the hydrogen bomb. It occurs under conditions of extreme temperature and pressure in which hydrogen (or its heavier cousins deuterium and tritium) nuclei fuse to release energy.

In 1989, Martin Fleischmann and Stanley Pons, chemistry professors from the University of Utah in the US, startled the world with their claim of having achieved fusion in a table top experiment.

They announced that the anomalous excess heat they observed while performing electrolysis of "heavy water" (water containing deuterium instead of hydrogen) with a palladium cathode was due to fusion of deuterium nuclei packed into the palladium's molecular lattice in such a way for fusion to take place.

This claimed discovery of fusion at room temperature dubbed 'cold fusion' attracted worldwide attention due to its apparent potential to become a cheap and abundant source of energy.

But the physics community quickly denounced the claims as utter nonsense as fusion reaction at room temperature defied contemporary understanding of nuclear physics.

These early criticisms of cold fusion "were premature and adverse", Michael McKubre of SRI International in California and one of the strong believers of cold fusion says in his report.

"More than sufficient evidence now proves that low energy nuclear reactions occur," says Meulenberg.

"It is to be hoped that with the new knowledge obtained over the last 25 years, more physicists and chemists (and biologists) will recognize something real here and will look for ways of applying their specialties to the expanding field," he added.

"We have direct evidence that the effect is real and is nuclear in nature," US physicist Abdul-Rahman Lomax of the Infusion Institute in Massachusetts says in his report.

"It is time that serious work is funded to study the conditions of cold fusion and other correlated effects, gathering the evidence needed to understand it."

According to another report in the journal, the famed Massachusetts Institute of Technology in the US has been offering for the last three years an optional introductory cold fusion course for its students.

Srinivasan said the continued assertion that cold fusion is unproven is not justified any more.

"This discovery is too important to be neglected, and LENR research deserves the support of government funding agencies, scientific academies and also the private sector."

He said an industrial-grade Nickel-Hydrogen LENR reactor invented by Italian scientist Andrea Rossi was already working and two private companies were in the race to bring out their own models before 2020.

Srinivasan said the traditional reactors based on fission process with associated problems of waste disposal, decommissioning and radiation release had no future.

"It is just a matter four or five years for energy sources based on cold fusion to be commercially available."

The absence of neutrons and gamma rays in cold fusion makes it a clean form of nuclear energy without the accompaniment of radiation, he said.

"Experimental evidence shows that LENR can have very large energy gains, but the engineering of commercial prototypes is still relatively crude," says David Nagel of the George Washington University in the US.

"Whatever the commercial timescale, LENR energy promises major benefits for human kind in future decades and beyond."

Source:- Cold fusion is real, claim scientists | Zee News
 

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