[NewCandle] Transmutation of aluminum to silver
Jones Beene
jonesb9 at pacbell.net
Sun Aug 31 15:38:42 EDT 2008
--- Nick
> a viable transmutative route from 27Al to Ag, even
as I was talking with him the night ...
well - for the record - naturally occurring silver is
composed of only two stable isotopes, 107Ag and
109Ag, with 107Ag being the more abundant (52%). The
'average' of near 108 is of course deceptive... this
makes it tough.
Pd and Ag have been often linked in the LENR
literature of course .
If you got to 107Ag from a beta decay of atomic mass
108Cd - which at least has a round number - then the
radioactivity would be noticeable. Did you check for
that?
This does not work out easily into anything - or from
anything which is believable or found in the
literature AFAIK. Perhaps nitrogen from the acid is
also involved somehow or more likely since you need to
drastically change the ratio by adding only neutrons -
one would need to theorize that many shrunken,
energy-deficient 'deuterinos' (Mills) are going to
di-neutrons first and adding neutrons w/o protons. Too
bizarre to imagine!
BTW - as for a future testing - I would also suggest
to try one sample for comparison which is chilled as
low as possible in the freezer. You might get better
results - not worse at lower temperature, if the
deuteron needs to be pinned, or ordered. Also a
magnetic field would help in that regard
Jones
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