National Instruments, a major U.S. company that produces tools for engineers and scientists offers an annual ‘NI Week’ trade show, this year at the Austin Convention Center in Texas.
Francesco Celani, a physicist with the Italian National Institute of Nuclear Physics in Frascati, Italy, brought a LENR device he developed that uses hydrogen gas and a specially treated nickel wire.
Daniel Rocha sums up the demo on Brian Wang’s NextBigFuture site with these details.
Celani has shown that excess heat was produced during the conference for 6 hours, but it continued after the conference for 55 hours, up to the time when this email was sent. The short summary lists:
-Celani’s demo reactor was turned on for about 6 hours before NIWeek 2012 started, on Saturday.
– On Sunday the demo reactor was brought to the NIWeek 2012 hall where it got turned on before 12:00 and *still is working*, so for a total of 55 hours as of writing.
– The reaction is stable. Peak excess heat power was 22W, currently stabilized at about 14W.
– Testing performed in front of a wide audience.
– Celani’s testing wire is made as a Cu-Ni-Mn alloy, a good sample that was already previously used […]