Rudower Chaussee 29

12489 Berlin

Deutschland

Tel: 030 6392 2566

FAX: 030 983 12306

E-mail: info@marwan-chemie.fta-berlin.de

 

Symposium on New Energy Technology

 

 

With this letter I suggest the organisation of the above mentioned symposium covering a wide range of the New Energy Technology with respect to clean environmental technologies reducing the quantity of exhausted toxic chemicals. This symposium includes ideas of how to improve the efficiency of energy sources as the alternative to fossil fuels and will mainly focus on the issue cold fusion. The aim is to collect experimental evidences for cold fusion with the attempt to give reasonable explanations summarising the facts to a conclusive theoretical and practically working model. 

It is obvious that cold fusion is not similar to thermonuclear hot fusion processes. An appreciable number of available documents reports on different methods by which nuclear reaction is produced and controlled at low temperature. Those methods are ranging from the use of gun-powder technique to the attempt to electrochemically induce nuclear fusion and fission with large excess heat in a deuterium containing metal lattice. The emphasis is directed towards the fabrication of cold fusion devices with unique commercial potentials demonstrating the power of low-temperature nuclear reactions as the alternative to any fossil fuels. The idea of cold nuclear fusion has lead to endless discussions about the kinetic impossibility of intense nuclear reactions with high coulomb barrier potentials. During the memorable Pons-Fleischmann experiment in 1989, involving electrochemical cells using heavy water with the corresponding electrolyte in the solution and palladium as the electrode, tremendous excess heat was discovered challenging all current atomic models. The attention has been focused to the development of new ideas ranging from nucleon-cluster to the electron charge–cluster model. Reproducibility of cold fusion reactions has been hardly obtained, and no group has fully resolved the problems associated with the special preparation of the metal electrode, the loading of heavy water and the turning on of excess heat.

To understand this process is one of the most challenging issues in the scientific world. Since I am very much involved and expert in cold fusion I propose to organise this symposium at the ACS National meetings. If it turns out as i strongly assume that cold fusion will be the alternative and most efficient energy source, the ACS would demonstrate to be the cutting edge leading science into a new period.