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    Scientist Makes Pitch for Massachusetts Cold Fusion Plant

    Italian scientist Andrea Rossi, who claims to have invented the world's first cold fusion machine, visited Massachusetts last week, meeting with a state senator and several scientists to explore the possibility of manufacturing cold fusion reactors in the state.

    Despite heavy skepticism in the scientific community about his work, Rossi came stateside at the invitation of Massachusetts Senate minority leader Bruce Tarr, a Republican who has been active in pursuing alternative energy legislation. "My thought process was pretty simple: If it works, I want this technology to be developed and manufactured in Massachusetts," Tarr told The Boston Globe.

    Rossi claims that his energy catalyzer, or "E-Cat," uses a small amount of input energy to trigger atoms of hydrogen and nickel to fuse together, giving off gobs of heat in the process. The excess heat, equivalent to more than 10 times the energy that was put in, can then be used to boil water to produce steam and ultimately generate electricity.

    The process is an attractive energy solution for two reasons: Unlike in nuclear fission, cold fusion doesn't give off dangerous radiation. And unlike the fusion processes that take place in the sun, cold fusion doesn't require unachievably high temperatures.

    However, in the two decades since experimentalists first claimed to have demonstrated the strange reaction, the line of research has largely been discredited. Most physicists think cold fusion is theoretically impossible, and devices that seem at first to demonstrate it generally fail to stand up to scrutiny. Today, the United States Department of Energy, academic journals and the U.S. Patent Office all consider cold fusion machines to be hoaxes.

    Nonetheless, Rossi has heated up the cold fusion debate once again this year. He hasn't revealed much about the inner workings of his E-Cat machine, citing the fact that it isn't yet patent-protected, but a handful of scientists have attended demonstrations of the device in Bologna, Italy, and have given it a nod of approval, saying it produces too much excess energy to be utilizing a simple chemical reaction.

    Rossi said he has sold 13 E-Cat units since a demo in October. [Italian Cold Fusion Machine Passes Another Test]

    Along with Tarr, Rossi met with representatives from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Northeastern University and the University of Massachusetts on his recent trip. Those in attendance said the meeting was mainly spent discussing the logistics of setting up manufacturing of household cold fusion power generators in the state, rather than the validity of the science behind cold fusion.

    "Knowing the reputation of cold fusion, I went in with a very healthy level of skepticism," said Robert Tamarin, dean of sciences at University of Massachusetts, Lowell. That said, he added, "If it’s successful, no wants to have to say later that we walked away from it."

    Rossi said he plans to come back to Massachusetts soon, and hopes things will move quickly. "We are all hoping to get something started in a matter of weeks, not months," he said.

    Follow Natalie Wolchover on Twitter @nattyover. Follow Life's Little Mysteries on Twitter @llmysteries, then join us on Facebook.

     

    220 comments

    • john  •  Irvine, United States  •  5 mths ago
      I'm packing up my time machine and booking a flight to Massachusetts right now!
      • AlexanderO 5 mths ago
        Don't waste your time. Just go into the past and rip the guy off.
      • Frank B 5 mths ago
        make sure you have enough road to get your DeLorean to 88 mph
      • ChristianStacey 5 mths ago
        Frank B: TeslaMotorsCom Cars go 300MPG & 0-60 in 3.7 sec. Dr Steven Jones tried to debunk Cold Fusion in the 1980's, along with the Dept of Energy, only to try to debunk Free Energy Technology on 9/11, and Einstein tried to debunk Faster-Than-Light... Yet, Cold Fusion has been Real, Free Energy Technology is Real and Faster-Than-Light is Real ... Thanks to Nikola Tesla and Dr Judy Wood!!
    • Kenshin Himura  •  5 mths ago
      If this actually worked, don't you think he could sell his design to any private company and make billions?

      But no, he is looking for government money: easy to come by with no oversight.
      • Psychentist 5 mths ago
        And there's bound to be at least one politician with zero science education who will use it as a campaigning gimmick.
      • Mere 5 mths ago
        Kenshin he isn't looking to sell his design to anyone, he is discussing the possibility of manufacturing them in Massachusets THAT'S ALL read the article.
      • Salty Cracker 5 mths ago
        I also am working on a device that will produce energy for next to nothing,the problem is if you get the patent out you either sell out to big energy or something very bad happens to you.
    • MIKE  •  Boston, United States  •  5 mths ago
      Monorail, monorail, .....
      • energytimers.wordpress.co ... 5 mths ago
        Yes. If we push down the tips of rows using less energy,we will get much energy caused by falling down of rows members sequentially . Is it call chain reaction ?
        The total output energy depend on rows amount.In case of atoms,the time and moment have to be right for this process.
      • Adam 5 mths ago
        you have a one track mind
    • George  •  5 mths ago
      Shades of 1986. Some of you may recall that two chemists, one from the Univ of Utah, the other from England made such a claim. We were all excited. . . for a while. None of the national labs could replicate their findings. Too bad, it would have been a great experiment. Hold the presses.
      • Psychentist 5 mths ago
        Indeed. Makes you wonder why people even utter the term anymore. It's basically synonymous with shame and fraud. I guess they think none of us have a memory longer than 30 years. Judging by some of the comments here, they're at least partially correct.
      • renard a 5 mths ago
        Yes, I remember those days. I also know the same "scientific community" shot down the SDI, and wouldn't ya know it: Seven years later we get the BLUE-RAY LASER!!!

        As I've said above, MAGNETO-HYDRODYNAMIC POWER AND ENERGY PHYSICS must be merged with the "cold fusion" effort. Any idiot can produce trmendous volumes of heat by mixing any number of elelments and compounds. This defeats the whole effort of dropping the mechanical phase of energy production which waste effort(energy produced) thereby defeating the purpose. Otherwise, remember to stay on track: What's needed is a self-contained electro-chemical (and\or electro-magnetic) process that results in producing several-fmanifold more electricity then is entered.

        Again MHD ENERGY THE POWER FOR THE HOUR!!!!
      • The Sage 5 mths ago
        I suggest you take a look at the research from the Navy Space and Warfare Center in San Diego before you dismiss cold fusion. They have indeed shown that low energy nuclear reactions are real.
    • Roderick  •  San Francisco, United States  •  5 mths ago
      I think cold fusion is possible, but I highly doubt it will be done with some kind of electrochemistry. The force of electrical repulsion between nuclei is very strong and they are very small and they are surrounded by electron clouds which repel each other strongly, so to get them within the very tiny distance required for the strong-nuclear force to fuse nuclei together simply can't happen with merely chemical means. Now if we had a piece of neutronium sculpted like an enzymatic surface to hold nuclei close together - that might work. Too bad there doesn't seem to be any neutronium laying around. If there is, it's in the center of the planet.
      • Psychentist 5 mths ago
        You may be able to contain neutronium in a high powered electrostatic or electromagnetic field, but it's likely to still be unstable at low temps and pressures, which would disqualify it for "cold" fusion. Just generating a 10 Tesla EM field for a few seconds is ungodly expensive, and the equipment capable of its facilitation is rare. After all that, you still have to find a way to shrink or fold the neutronium container to make less and less space for the nuclei to repel to. You might be able to compress it by increasing the intensity of the field, but that requires exponential increase in input power. By the time you did all that, you've wasted more energy than you've made. Even when you willingly suspend disbelief, the concept breaks down under scrutiny.
      • Psychentist 5 mths ago
        You may be able to contain neutronium in a high powered electrostatic or electromagnetic field, but it's likely to still be unstable at low temps and pressures, which would disqualify it for "cold" fusion. Just generating a 10 Tesla EM field for a few seconds is ungodly expensive, and the equipment capable of its facilitation is rare. After all that, you still have to find a way to shrink or fold the neutronium container to make less and less space for the nuclei to repel to. You might be able to compress it by increasing the intensity of the field, but that requires exponential increase in input power. By the time you did all that, you've wasted more energy than you've made. Even when you willingly suspend disbelief, the concept breaks down under scrutiny.
      • renard a 5 mths ago
        @Roderrick. read my comments above
    • Bruce  •  5 mths ago
      Whatever happened to the First Law of Thermodynamics? Was that just a passing fad?
    • Don  •  Mattoon, United States  •  5 mths ago
      So, in hydrogen fusion, two hydrogen nuclei fuse to produce a helium nucleus. You could prove this reaction by detecting the resultant helium (and decay products). So, in this E-cat contraption, if fusion were really taking place, could you not a) predict the resultant fusion product and then b) detect said element? If the fusion product is a short-lived radioactive isotope, you should be able to detect the decay products. Attacking the problem from the other direction... since the naysayers think its a chemical reaction, couldn't a decent chemist predict what chemical reaction was taking place and then test for said chemical product?

      This all seems pretty simple to me.
    • Robert F  •  Bossier City, United States  •  5 mths ago
      if it works it will certainly have no shortage of money to finance it
    • The Major  •  Jacksonville, United States  •  5 mths ago
      I have invented a nuclear fusion engine; it runs on heavy water.
    • Sam  •  5 mths ago
      This guy must have studied PT Barnums belief that there is a sucker born every minute.
    • SheaK  •  Englewood, United States  •  5 mths ago
      Cold fusion is very different from a chemical reaction. Most of the hoax cold-fusion attempts thus far have simply been chemical reactions, not actual fusion.

      Chemical energy power plant, anyone?
    • anonymouse  •  5 mths ago
      if this were genuine cold fusion, this guy would be dead or disappeared by now.
    • Shannon  •  5 mths ago
      I hope
    • AlexanderO  •  5 mths ago
      Has anyone ever heard of "conservation of momentum?" If a nuclear reaction takes place something has to come out real fast (otherwise no heat), in fact at least two nuclear by-products have to come out, they see nothing. It is the same issue that Pons and Fleishmann had with their palladium based "cold fusion" reactor. If my memory serves me correctly nickel and hydrogen form nickel-hydride, so from the first glance it appears to be a battery. The guy loads the nickel electrodes for a while under voltage with hydrogen, it reaches a stead state, then he demos it by showing off the pre-stored energy coming out as heat. Short circuit a battery and see what happens, better yet drive a battery in reverse with reverse voltage and it will get really, really hot, way beyond the energy you are putting in.
    • Chad  •  5 mths ago
      You must be impressed by the use of such scientific terms as "gobs of heat".Riiight.Hoax.Always check the background of anyone and anything you plan on investing in.
    • Lester  •  5 mths ago
      Only 29.95 for your own Cold Fusion Powerplant + $5,000,000.00 shipping and handling charge.
    • Dingus  •  5 mths ago
      farce
    • Fizzle  •  5 mths ago
      if it was just a matter of manufacturing and selling it, I'd get in on that. There's always money to be made on such gadgets. The Ronco Cold Fusion Portable Outlet--order now and we'll throw in a second one for just the cost of processing! But wait, there's more...
    • AlexanderO  •  5 mths ago
      For all those of you who want to blindly jump on the "free energy" bandwagon. Do an internet search for Pons and Fleishmann (sp?) "cold fusion" hoopla that happened about 20 years ago. In their case, even some prestigious institutions set up labs and announced "verifications" but after the dust settled, no fusion, no big money, just a lot of hope.
    • MattP  •  5 mths ago
      I made a tachyon device for faster than light communication which will revolutionize computing, all communication systems, and even generate causal paradoxes! Can I get a senator to sponsor me too, please? You can't look at my device yet, though, it's not patented. Just take it on faith, our population has been conditioned to accept this as a legitimate excuse and not suspect deception. Oh, and I need money. Lots of money. Incidentally, the device actually runs on money.
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