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Free radical recombination, a concept for the thermalization of the zero point energy (Score: 1)
by vlad on Wednesday, July 30, 2003 @ 00:06:01 UTC
(User Info | Send a Message) http://www.zpenergy.com
by John P.Franks:

Hydrogen is the most abundant element in the Universe and the origin of all the elements of the periodic table. It occurs as a diatomic molecule H2 characterised as the most non polar of the diatomic gases. The energy required to break the covalent bond and separate the molecule into 2 free hydrogen atoms is quite high, about 14.4 electron volts per molecule. It may be possible to use the disassociation and reassociation of hydrogen as a means of extracting useful energy from the zero point flux. The author will outline in as broad of terms as possible, the scheme for thermalizing the zero point flux.

Hydrogen exists in a state of equilibrium with with its free radical state by the reactions:

H2=> H + H
H +H=> H2

Hydrogen molecules are continuously breaking up into separate hydrogen atoms, and recombining to form hydrogen. The first reaction requires 14.4 electron volts to tear the hydrogen molecule apart, the second returns that energy to environment. There is no energy gained or lost in this equilibrium, which is as it should be by the Law of the Conservation of Energy.

At room temperature there should be a certain fraction of the molecules in a high enough energy state to disassociate spontaneously, that energy a consequence of the Maxwellian Distribution of Velocities of a gas.

Any molecule aquiring enough energy to disassociate from the distribution will eventually in time return that energy to the distribution when the atoms recombine. There should also be a proportion of the population excited by the zero point energy to a high enough energy to also undergo disassociation. After a certain time, this energy will be returned also to the vacuum when the atoms recombine.

Consider a thought experiment in which the disassociated hydrogen atoms might be drawn away from the location where they split apart and then made to recombine. What would have occurred is the transport of the energy that split the molecule to another location, thereby causing an energy density change equivocal to a temperature differential. In doing this we have thermalized the zero point energy and can produce useful work from it. Creating a continous mechanism for this effect would be the creation of a zero point energy converter.

This outlines a general scheme in broad terms that might serve as a general outline for a future development. A great deal of research will still be needed to be done for this idea to come to fruitition.


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