These guys seem to, at the very least, have moved from "just another perpetual motion scheme" (circa 1999) to "a perpetual motion scheme that has one university and one power company hoodwinked" (today).
Or maybe they've really found the holy grail. They don't seem to be looking for new investors at least.
http://www.blacklightpower.com/
http://venturebeat.com/2008/10/21/b...ible-claims-of-a-new-renewable-energy-source/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydrino_theory
http://biz.yahoo.com/prnews/081211/3801936en_public.html?.v=1
I do find it somewhat interesting that this guy apparently first came up with this hydrino theory to explain what was really happening with "Cold Fusion".
Or maybe they've really found the holy grail. They don't seem to be looking for new investors at least.
http://www.blacklightpower.com/
http://venturebeat.com/2008/10/21/b...ible-claims-of-a-new-renewable-energy-source/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydrino_theory
http://biz.yahoo.com/prnews/081211/3801936en_public.html?.v=1
I do find it somewhat interesting that this guy apparently first came up with this hydrino theory to explain what was really happening with "Cold Fusion".
Blacklight is providing the Rowan [University] researchers with a common industrial form of nickel called Raney nickel, which is then put through a reaction with water to produce energy. “We’ve been able to regularly reproduce these results and we believe any research lab could do the same,” Peter Jansson, the faculty member heading the experiments, told me.
There’s one odd factor in Jansson’s tests, which is that Blacklight supplies the Raney nickel, which it in turn obtains from an industrial supplier. When I asked, Jansson wasn’t sure what, if anything, Blacklight did to prepare the material, but Mills was happy to tell me in a separate interview that it’s doped with a very small amount of another common material, sodium hydroxide, in a process that others could replicate.
Jansson, for his part, said that the chemists on his team who analyzed the material couldn’t see any clear way that Blacklight might have rigged the tests by somehow storing energy in the Raney nickel. “It would be rather difficult to do this quantity of heat storage chemically in this material,” said Jansson. “We would have seen significant changes.”
It should be noted that Jansson has been aware of Blacklight for years, and even acted as an advisor for an energy company that ultimately made a strategic investment, but it appears to have no unethical ties, just an ongoing interest. Jansson also professes to be impartial to the existence of hydrinos, saying he’s interested in hearing any “alternative explanation” to the hydrino theory. Mills, for his part, says that he’d like for scientists to independently verify every step of the process, from obtaining the Raney nickel and doping it to the calorimeter tests to prove that the energy bursts really exist. The information needed to run those tests is free to the public, he says; the only thing required is a researcher willing to take the time to puzzle through the process.
Unfortunately, the reactions Jansson’s team is observing produce only a quick burst of intense heat. In a commercialized process, there needs to be a steady output. Mills says he has purposefully kept knowledge of how to loop the reaction within the company, so that his own researchers can remain a step ahead in their work on the 50KW reactor the company earlier announced.
According to Mills, it’s likely that a totally independent researcher will verify the whole process within a year. Meanwhile, the company will start licensing out its energy process, and do work with hydrinos in various chemical applications.