james-p Posted February 25, 2011 Posted February 25, 2011 i am doing cold fusion for a science fair project and i was wondering if any one has heard of a buildable cold fusion reactor, as i will try to build one as a experiment, but i havent founed any with concrete instructions to asemble one yet. does anyone have a idea on how to build one. thanks for you help.
Mr Skeptic Posted February 25, 2011 Posted February 25, 2011 I think all you need is to throw some muons into a deuterium/tritium mix. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muon-catalyzed_fusion
alpha2cen Posted February 25, 2011 Posted February 25, 2011 Making muon is not easy. It is required very big collider and much energy. The difficult step is to make muon, till now it's economy is not too high.
james-p Posted February 25, 2011 Author Posted February 25, 2011 i have seen some that require putting a paladium into a deuturium solution and passing a electric curent trough it but i couldint find any proof or instructions on how to do this.
Mr Skeptic Posted February 25, 2011 Posted February 25, 2011 i have seen some that require putting a paladium into a deuturium solution and passing a electric curent trough it but i couldint find any proof or instructions on how to do this. I think that one was a scam.
mississippichem Posted February 25, 2011 Posted February 25, 2011 i have seen some that require putting a paladium into a deuturium solution and passing a electric curent trough it but i couldint find any proof or instructions on how to do this. That is most definitely a scam. There is no way to supply enough energy to overcome the repulsion of electrons or nuclei between atoms with electrolysis. You might want to consider a different project, or maybe something else to do with fusion that doesn't involve producing fusion yourself. I think you will have trouble producing muons without a large budget. If no muons, then you will need a massive laser or some type of fission device to reach the temperatures required to cause fusion. Your projected cost outlook is surely over a few million dollars. I don't know about you, but I can't afford that .
imatfaal Posted February 25, 2011 Posted February 25, 2011 And if you can afford that - can we get jobs as advisors? If you really want to study nuclear/atomic physics then I am sure there are other avenue that you can go down - I don't know what age group you are part of but you can build your own geiger counter. At a slightly easier level - but with great results - what about a cloud chamber? You can get trails from cosmic rays, which is beyond cool (well it is in my tiny mind)
james-p Posted February 26, 2011 Author Posted February 26, 2011 i am in 11 grade and my science fair project is mostly reserch but i would like a small fusion expeiment to do also i just researeshed one about puting a tungsten cathode inside a duteriume solution and passing a electrical current through it. what is your opinion on this. http://www.amasci.com/weird/anode.txt thanks
Mr Skeptic Posted February 26, 2011 Posted February 26, 2011 My advice is not to base your science fair project on a scam. No one has ever built a fusion reactor that can provide energy yet, although the hot fusion reactors have gotten to the point where they get more energy out than they put in, not counting the energy to create the reactor. The only cold fusion I've seen that isn't a scam is muon-catalyzed fusion, but that has an energy loss because muons are hard to get and they decay too quickly. Oh, and any website that titles itself "infinite energy" is probably full of scams. They always know so much about energy that they never build working energy generators and sell the electricity, because they know better than to try their own advice.
Schrödinger's hat Posted March 2, 2011 Posted March 2, 2011 You could build a Farnsworth reactor. Not really cold fusion, but the idea is to keep the ions from thermalising as long as possible and accelerate them with an electric field. It'd probably require a budget of about 50k, and some engineering expertise though.
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now