US20110174632A1
2011-07-21
12/688,630
2010-01-15
A material surface treatment protocol uses concurrent electrical, vibrational, and photonic stimulation to generate an exothermic reaction and coat the surface of a material, such as palladium. This protocol is performed at or near the boiling point of water within a sealed vessel that prevents the escape of steam and that is lined with silica or a similar glass to increase the silica available to the reaction. The great majority of the applied energy is heat used to elevate the temperature to near the boiling point, while concurrent stimulations provide only about 100 mW of additional energy for the surface treatment.
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C25D9/04 » CPC main
Electrolytic coating other than with metals with inorganic materials
C25B11/051 » CPC further
Electrodes; Manufacture thereof not otherwise provided for characterised by the material Electrodes formed of electrocatalysts on a substrate or carrier
C25D5/011 » CPC further
Electroplating characterised by the process; Pretreatment or after-treatment of workpieces Electroplating using electromagnetic wave irradiation
C25D21/02 » CPC further
Processes for servicing or operating cells for electrolytic coating Heating or cooling
C25C1/20 IPC
Electrolytic production, recovery or refining of metals by electrolysis of solutions of noble metals
The invention relates to surface treatment of materials, and in particular to preparation of the surface of a material in a liquid medium in order to facilitate certain desirable exothermic reactions using such material.
U.S. Pat. No. 7,442,287 describes a surface treatment method of preparing materials, such as palladium, at or near their surfaces in order to facilitate their use, e.g., for generating exothermic reactions. In that treatment method, a solution in water of an electrolyte, a surfactant, and a pH-adjusting agent (to maintain the pH of the solution between 6.5 and 8.9) is heated to and maintained at or just below the boiling point in an open glass beaker. A pair of electrodes, at least one of which has the surface to be treated, is immersed in the solution with a gap between them. The electrodes are then electrically (and vibrationally) stimulated as a series of pulses, while simultaneously being photonically stimulated by a light source. Scanning electron microscope (SEM) images of the treated electrodes show that the concurrent stimulations of the electrode material while immersed in the hot solution form crater sites on the electrode surface and leave a silica coating with a stratified and sponge-like texture.
The metallic surface treated by the method provides enhanced sites for facilitating desired reactions, e.g., hydrogen absorption and release, hydrogenation, catalytic reactions, and exothermic reactions. Palladium, e.g., is known to have a large capacity for hydrogen storage and release, useful for fuel cells and the like, the level of performance of which depends on the presence of certain surface sites for efficient hydrogen exchange.
The present invention is an improvement of our previous method set forth in the aforementioned '287 patent. Similar to before, the protocol consists of a specific series of steps applying electrical and photonic stimuli between conductive electrodes immersed in a solution containing lithium sulfate as an electrolyte and a silica compound while that solution is maintained at an elevated temperature at or near the boiling point.
As the work on the protocol described in our previous patent has progressed, we have moved it from an open glass beaker into a sealed vessel to prevent the escape of steam, along with other constituents in the solution or reaction products. As higher temperature boiling points were obtained under pressure, the treatment protocol proved to be more robust when taking place in such a sealed container with specific refinements.
Having the treatment reactions occur in the presence of silica or glass proved to be very beneficial. In particular, we obtained better results (1) when we lined the inner surface of the reaction vessel with a glass beaker, (2) when we put a quartz cap over the beaker, (3) when we replaced our stainless-steel thermocouple wells with glass ones, and (4) when we threaded glass beads onto the electrodes. Additionally, the solution contained either a soluble form of silica or a silica compound in suspension. When conducted in such a glass vessel, the use of a DC stimulus and a vibrational stimulus in the protocol proved to be optional.
The electrode material immersed in the hot solution is subject to electrical and photonic stimulation. It has been found that the treatment works better when some RF frequencies are used as electrical stimuli than others, indicating a possible resonance phenomenon that has proved to be beneficial. Stimulating the system at one or more resonant frequencies can cause the underlying oscillation to amplify. In particular, an effective RF electrical stimulus was shown to be an amplified replication of a signal emitted during the reaction, which was a 43.4 MHz sine wave added to a 3.1 MHz sine wave.
Temperature spikes were observed with electrodes made of four different metals: palladium, silver, platinum, and gold, and using three different silica compounds: anionic silica hydride, lithium metasilicate, and sodium silicate.
FIG. 1 is a data log for a first experiment using a palladium electrode in a heavy water solution and being stimulated in accord with the method of the present invention.
FIG. 2 is an SEM photo of an electrode surface resulting from treatment by the protocol recorded in FIG. 1.
FIGS. 3, 4, and 5 are respective Energy Dispersive Spectrometry (EDS) spectral analyses of the deposited layer and bare metal for the treated electrode surface and of the cross-sectioned electrode.
FIGS. 6, 7, and 8 are SEM photos of the cross-sectioned electrode coating (6 and 7) and of the electrode metal itself (8).
FIGS. 9 and 10 are EDS spectral analyses of the sectioned electrode metal.
FIG. 11 is a data log for a replication of the test protocol, using a palladium electrode in a solution of anionic silica and lithium sulfate in heavy water, and stimulated with a modulated pulse stream.
FIG. 12 is a table of atomic concentrations for the electrode obtained from Auger analysis after conclusion of the protocols for FIGS. 3-10.
FIG. 13 is a data log for a replication of the test protocol, again using a palladium electrode in a heavy water solution and stimulated in accord with the present invention.
FIG. 14 is an EDS spectral analysis of the electrode resulting from the protocol for FIG. 13.
FIGS. 15, 16, and 17 are respective data log, and SEM photos of two pieces of the wire for another experiment using glass beads threaded over palladium electrodes in a heavy water solution and stimulated in accord with the present invention.
FIG. 18 is a data log for yet another experiment conducted using glass-bead-threaded palladium electrodes, but in a light water solution and stimulated in accord with the present invention.
FIGS. 19 and 20 are data logs for experiments of the surface treatment method respectively using silver and platinum electrodes in heavy water.
FIGS. 21 and 22 are data logs for experiments of the surface treatment method, using palladium electrodes in heavy water, wherein lithium metasilicate and sodium silicate, respectively, were dissolved in the solution.
FIG. 23 is an SEM photo and accompanying EDS spectrum for the electrode resulting from the experiment corresponding to FIG. 22.
FIG. 24 is a data log for an experiment using a palladium electrode in a solution of lithium metasilicate and lithium sulfate in heavy water, and stimulated with a modulated pulse stream.
FIG. 25 is a data log for an experiment using a palladium electrode in a solution of lithium metasilicate and lithium sulfate in heavy water, and stimulated with a 3.1 MHz sine wave added to a 43.4 MHz sine wave.
FIG. 26 is a SEM photo of an electrode used in that experiment.
The treatment protocol is performed in an electrolytic cell consisting of two or more electrodes, composed of similar or dissimilar metals, for example of palladium, silver, platinum, or gold, or even conductive material other than metal. One or more of the electrodes have material surfaces to be treated. At least one of the electrodes may be coated with silica or a silicate, threaded with silica or glass beads, or the electrode may consist of sintered metal and silica. The electrodes are immersed in a solution or suspension of an electrolyte in a liquid, such as heavy water (D2O), lithium sulfate (Li2SO4), and a silica compound either in solution or in suspension. Alternatively, less active results have also been observed using light water (H2O). A combination of both light and heavy water could also be used. A pH-buffering agent, as used in our aforementioned '287 patent, was found to be optional. If used, the buffering agent might comprise either EDTA or citric acid in quantities sufficient to maintain a pH in a range from 6.5 to 8.9.
As before, the electrolytic cell may be of any size needed to accommodate a work piece whose surface is to be treated by this protocol. However, now the vessel used in our experiments was a stainless steel cylinder with a central well 2 inches deep and 2 inches in diameter, having a closed bottom and a removable top. Ultimately, it was dimensioned to accommodate a glass beaker capped with a quartz top. Alternatively, the vessel may be a glass- or silica-lined metallic vessel. The vessel could also be lined with a piezoelectric material, in the form, e.g., of a porcelain glaze. A sealed vessel prevented the escape of steam, along with other constituents in the solution or reaction products, and allowed higher temperature boiling points to be obtained under pressure. The sealed vessel also made it much more practical to instrument the experiments and to data log their results. Holes in the top allowed electrodes and thermocouples to pass through it, while sealed glass ports in the vessel wall allowed for the concurrent photonic stimulation by exterior illumination. The vessel weighed more than five kilograms, thereby providing considerable thermal mass to ensure that measured temperature transients were generated within the vessel and not the result of external impulses. As a safety practice appropriate when working with exothermic reactions in a sealed vessel at or near the boiling point of water, our vessel was equipped with a pair of pressure relief valves set to lift sequentially at different pressures.
An embodiment of the surface treatment method in accord with the present invention uses either of two commercial products called “MegaH-” and “Super Hydrate”, as one source of silica with which the electrodes to be treated are in intimate contact. These compositions are respectively the powdered and dissolved form of an anionic silica hydride. The following points can be made about these two products: They are described in their marketing literature as 1) an anionic hydride organosiloxane; 2) a silsequioxane having hydroxyl-terminated constituents; 3) sources of ionized hydrogen contained within soluble microclusters of silica hydride; and 4) consisting of tetrahedral frameworks that encapsulate hydrogen cations. Pure samples of the products without additives were not available. According to its package label, Mega H- has potassium citrate, potassium carbonate, and oleic acid added. Super Hydrate has potassium carbonate, magnesium sulfate, and oleic acid added.
Alternative embodiments of the surface treatment method in accord with the present invention have as sources of silica either sodium silicate Na2SiO3 in solution, or lithium metasilicate Li2SiO3 in suspension. A chelating agent, such as EDTA, may be used to facilitate the suspension of the silica compound.
The liquid within the vessel was blanketed during the experiments with one or a combination of hydrogen and helium gases, for example in approximately equal percentages, which were introduced through two inlet valves. The atmosphere was vented through an outlet valve. The saturation of the liquid with these gases is optional.
A heating coil was located in a cavity in the bottom of the vessel, and its input voltage and current measured to monitor input power. The temperature of the vessel was first raised to 102° C.±1°, then maintained until the temperature of the liquid had remained stable near the boiling point over an hour or more to establish a thermal equilibrium. A pair of thermocouples monitored the temperature of the liquid via thermocouple wells projecting into the liquid. The wells were first made of stainless steel and later of glass. The thermocouples also passed through the vessel's cap via Teflon® seals compressed with Swagelok® fittings.
Through experimentation, it was determined over time that the exothermic reaction had a characteristic and readily identifiable heat signature. In later experiments, there was less concern about establishing thermal equilibrium and the temperature was driven more quickly to the operating range of the reaction and it was stimulated sooner. No attempt was made to make calorimetric measurements; the temperature transients were judged to be sufficient evidence of heat generation.
Two or more electrodes were immersed in the liquid. The work piece or pieces to be treated are used as one or more of these electrodes, which can be of any shape and size, such as that of a nozzle. The material being surface treated by this method may be a conductive material such as a solid metal or alloy, containing for example palladium, or may be metallically plated with the desired surface material. Any of the electrodes may also be surface coated with other materials, such as silicates or polymers (such as polytetrafluoroethylene), with either the underlying metal or the coating or both to be treated by the protocol.
RF electrical and photonic stimuli were applied in manner similar to that previously described in our earlier patent. For example, in some of our experiments, the electrical stimuli were provided via three palladium wires of 0.025″ diameter: an anode for the RF stimulus, a second anode for the DC stimulus, and a common cathode. The electrodes formed a triangle with sides 0.9, 1.45, and 1.45 inches long. The shortest side lay between the RF anode and the common cathode. The electrical stimulation may, therefore, consist of either or both direct current and alternating current, where the alternating current can be modulated with frequencies in the RF range, preferably including frequencies that coincide with absorptive spectra of components of the solution. The electrical stimulation may be a combination of direct current voltage and alternating current voltage applied, either concurrently or sequentially, between either separate anodes or a common anode and a common cathode. The electrodes and the thermocouples were equally spaced on a bolt circle, so thermocouples would be 0.9 and 1.45 inches away from the cathode. All electrodes were isolated from the vessel and sheathed in glass tubing to the surface of the liquid in order to keep them straight and to concentrate the RF stimulus in the liquid. The electrodes passed through the vessel's top via Teflon® seals compressed with Swagelok® fittings.
Four “Ultrabright” white light-emitting diodes (LEDs) capable of generating 15,000 mcd were spaced equally around the vessel below the surface of the liquid as photonic stimuli. These stimuli were provided through sealed glass ports in the vessel wall. The LEDs are intensity-modulated with pulses during the same period when the electrical stimulation is applied. Electrical and photonic stimulation may be applied either concurrently or sequentially.
Having the treatment reactions occur in the presence of silica or glass proved to be very beneficial. Attempts to run the protocol directly within vessels of stainless steel and Teflon® were not successful. We obtained better results (1) when we lined the inner surface of the reaction vessel with a glass beaker, (2) when we put a quartz cap over the beaker, (3) when we replaced our stainless-steel thermocouple wells with glass ones, and (4) when we threaded glass beads onto the palladium wire electrodes. When conducted in such a glass vessel, the use of a DC stimulus in the protocol proved to be optional.
Additionally, our solution contained a form of silica. We had noted that the first step in the protocol described in our earlier patent consisted of heating the solution until the bubbles had cleared from its surface. Those bubbles, of course, were characteristic of surfactants, and the anionic silica hydride had originally been chosen for its surfactant properties. However, the disappearance of the bubbles indicated that the surfactant properties had also diminished or disappeared. What was left was silica plus any additives present in the original surfactant composition.
The protocol typically requires at least two hours of treatment before bursts of heat are observed. It is suspected that something must be happening to either the solution or to the electrodes in that period to facilitate the observed reaction. Lithium salts, such as lithium sulfate (Li2SO4), are used as an electrolyte in the solution. Since the reaction does not occur immediately, it is possible that the silica and the lithium in our protocol are bonding in some way before the bursts of heat are observed. In particular, the lithium may. be combining with the silica compound in the solution over the time frame of the treatment protocol to form a lithium silicate, possibly one or more of Li4SiO4 (lithium orthosilicate), Li6Si2O7, Li2SiO3 (lithium metasilicate), LiSi4O7, or Li4Si3O8; or since silsesquioxanes were used as the anionic silica hydride surfactant in the solution for the experiments, perhaps the lithium is bonding to resulting siliceous cage structures when that compound is used as the source of the silica.
It was also found that the treatment works better when some RF frequencies are used as electrical stimuli than others and that the protocol yielded heat bursts in the sealed vessel in more or less time when different frequencies were used as stimuli. Given how important the presence of silica is to the effectiveness of the treatment protocol, it is speculated that certain natural frequencies of vibration of the silica bonds in the solution are being driven to vibrational resonance by the RF electrical stimuli, the photonic stimuli, or both. As a general statement, resonance is the tendency of a system or phenomena to oscillate at larger amplitude at some frequencies than others. Such systems and phenomena absorb energy at these resonant frequencies, such that stimulating a system or a phenomena at a resonant frequency or set of resonant frequencies can cause the underlying oscillation to amplify, often dramatically so. For example, the electrical stimulation may comprise one sinusoidal signal having a frequency between 1 MHz and 20 MHz added to another sinusoidal signal having a frequency between 25 MHz and 100 MHz. When viewed with an Agilent 4195A spectrum analyzer, one of the effective RF electrical stimuli described in the '287 patent was shown to be a rich comb of spectra in the range of 1 MHz to 200 MHz, spaced at 6.2 MHz and having peaks in the profile of the spectral comb at 3.1 MHz and 50 MHz, which were the frequencies of the underlying pulses and the sinusoidal modulation of those pulses. That stimulus provided literally dozens of spectra that could have been at resonant frequencies. The electrical stimulation may comprise a replication of electrical energy emitted during a desired exothermic reaction, but with greater amplitude.
Some experiments were conducted in a glass vessel of similar dimensions to the steel one described above that permitted the reaction to be observed as it was taking place. During the reaction, the RF stimulus was turned off and an attempt made to capture any signals emitted by the reaction with an Agilent model DSO5054A high-speed digitizing oscilloscope. Although the emitted signals proved to be very transient and elusive, one of them was captured. It resembled a 43.4 MHz sine wave added to a 3.1 MHz one, distorted by considerable noise. Subsequently, a cleaner version of that signal generated by an Agilent 81150A waveform generator was used as a stimulus to the reaction. That stimulus proved to be effective.
Similar reasoning could be applied to any resonances for the photonic stimulus.
The specific steps of a representative protocol are shown below:
Here are some representative results from experiments conducted on the dates shown. The protocol evolved over time, as indicated below, culminating in the preferred protocol described above:
Taken together, we believe the experiments conducted with anionic silica hydride, lithium metasilicate, and sodium silicate support the reasoning that silica is critical to the reaction and that lithium silicate promotes a stronger reaction.
One of the things that caught our attention in the experiments above was the frequent indication of fluorine in the EDS analyses. The Feb. 28, 2009, experiment showed F at four sites. Several samples showed traces of aluminum and one showed gallium at multiple sites. Flanagan's anionic silica hydride includes several additives. His “Mega H” powder contains potassium citrate (K3C6HSO7), potassium carbonate (K2CO3), and oleic acid (C18H34O2). His “Super Hydrate” solution also contains potassium carbonate and oleic acid, plus magnesium sulfate (MgSO4). We tested Flanagan's products with EDS analysis to clarify the ingredients of the protocol. Sodium and copper were found to also be present, although they were not disclosed as ingredients on the product labels. Lithium sulfate (Li2SO4) is used in our protocol as an electrolyte. However, the identified original ingredients for the protocol do not account for the presence of fluorine, aluminum and gallium in the post-experiment EDS analyses.
Now return to FIG. 12, the Atomic Concentration Table from the Auger analysis of the Jan. 3, 2009 experiment. Note the presence of nitrogen, aluminum, chlorine, and copper. Each of these is a transmutation product of one of the ingredients in the protocol. Specifically:
Further, the 9F found above in the EDS analyses is the transmutation product of 8O.
If hydrogen or lithium had transmuted to helium and beryllium, EDS would not have detected them, which does not detect elements with atomic numbers below five.
We cannot account for the presence of gallium in the one sample.
We now have found strong evidence of transmutation products of six different elements using two different EDS systems, with aluminum having been found with both of them. Taken together, the data supports a strong claim that our protocol has induced nuclear reactions on numerous occasions. While that claim will doubtless be controversial, we assert that the evidence for it is strong.
The nature and shape of the bursts of heat recorded in our data logs, together with the condition of the electrode surfaces seen from SEM analyses, indicate that the surface temperature of the electrodes may locally approach or even attain the 1555° C. melting point of palladium, such that the solution at the surface of that electrode can locally flash to steam. A continuous reaction requires the on-going replenishment of solution in the liquid phase, which naturally occurs in the test reaction vessel. An alternative protocol may be to provide fresh solution at that inlet of a nozzle where the steam is exhausted. Finally, there is no evidence in any of our experiments that the exothermic reaction being induced is anything other than a surface effect. Given the apparent energy densities of that reaction, that could be very important because it indicates that, for whatever reason, the reaction is self-limiting to the surface area of the electrodes.
1. A method of preparing materials at or near their surfaces, comprising:
preparing a solution of an electrolyte in a liquid;
heating and maintaining the solution at an elevated temperature to within 5° C. of the boiling point in a sealed vessel;
electrically stimulating two or more conductive electrodes immersed within the solution over an extended time period by applying a voltage between electrodes, at least one of the electrodes having a surface to be treated thereby and in intimate contact with a source of silica; and
photonically stimulating the solution with illumination from a light source.
2. The method as in claim 1, wherein the liquid for the solution comprises water.
3. The method as in claim 2, wherein the water is predominantly light water (H2O).
4. The method as in claim 2, wherein the water is a combination of light water (H2O) and heavy water (D2O).
5. The method as in claim 2, wherein the water is predominantly heavy water (D2O).
6. The method as in claim 1, wherein the electrolyte comprises a lithium salt.
7. The method as in claim 6, wherein the lithium salt comprises lithium sulfate (Li2SO4).
8. The method as in claim 1, wherein a surfactant is added to the solution.
9. The method as in claim 1, wherein a buffering agent is added to the solution so as to maintain a pH in a range from 6.5 to 8.9.
10. The method as in claim 9, wherein the buffering agent is EDTA.
11. The method as in claim 9, wherein the buffering agent is citric acid.
12. The method in claim 1, wherein the solution in the sealed vessel is heated above its boiling point at atmospheric pressure and its pressure rises above one standard atmosphere.
13. The method as in claim 1, wherein the sealed vessel comprises a glass- or silica-lined metallic vessel with ports for the metallic electrodes and for one or more thermocouples.
14. The method as in claim 1, wherein the solution in the sealed vessel is blanketed with a gas.
15. The method as in claim 14, wherein the gas comprises hydrogen, helium, or a combination thereof.
16. The method as in claim 14, wherein the solution is saturated with the blanketing gas.
17. The method as in claim 1, wherein the conductive electrodes are metal.
18. The method as in claim 17, wherein the metal comprises one or more of palladium, silver, platinum and gold.
19. The method as in claim 17, wherein the conductive electrodes are of the same metal.
20. The method as in claim 17, wherein the conductive electrodes are of dissimilar metals.
21. The method as in claim 1, wherein at least one of the electrodes is a conductive material other than metal.
22. The method as in claim 1, wherein at least one of the electrodes is coated with silica.
23. The method as in claim 1, wherein at least one of the electrodes is coated with a silicate.
24. The method as in claim 1, wherein a source of the silica in contact with the electrodes comprises a silica compound in suspension in the water.
25. The method as in claim 24, wherein a chelating agent facilitates the suspension of the silica compound.
26. The method as in claim 25, wherein the chelating agent is EDTA.
27. The method as in claim 1, wherein a source of the silica comprises a lithium silicate.
28. The method as in claim 1, wherein a source of the silica in contact with the electrodes comprises a silica compound in solution.
29. The method as in claim 28, wherein the silica compound in solution comprises an anionic silica hydride.
30. The method as in claim 29, wherein the anionic silica hydride comprises a silsesquioxane composition.
31. The method as in claim 1, wherein a source of the silica comprises one or more silica or glass beads threaded over the one or more electrodes being surface treated.
32. The method as in claim 1, wherein a source of silica lies within the composition of the electrode.
33. The method as in claim 32, wherein a source of silica comprises an electrode consisting of sintered metal and silica.
34. The method as in claim 1, wherein a source of silica includes a silica or glass lining of the sealed vessel.
35. The method as in claim 1, wherein the sealed vessel is lined with a piezoelectric material.
36. The method as in claim 35, wherein the piezoelectric material is a porcelain glaze.
37. The method as in claim 1, wherein the electrical and photonic stimuli are applied concurrently.
38. The method as in claim 1, wherein the electrical and photonic stimuli are applied sequentially.
39. The method as in claim 1, wherein the electrical stimulation is a direct current voltage.
40. The method as in claim 1, wherein the electrical stimulation is an alternating current voltage.
41. The method as in claim 40, wherein the alternating current voltage has frequencies in the RF range.
42. The method as in claim 41, wherein the alternating current voltage has frequencies coinciding with absorptive spectra of components in the solution.
43. The method as in claim 1, wherein the electrical stimulation comprise an RF comb of spectra with spaced peaks in a range of 1 MHz to 200 MHz, at least some of said peaks coinciding with molecular vibrational resonance frequencies in the solution.
44. The method as in claim 1, wherein the electrical stimulation comprises a sinusoidal signal have a frequency between 1 MHz and 20 MHz added to another sinusoidal signal having a frequency between 25 MHz and 100 MHz.
45. The method as in claim 1, wherein the electrical stimulation comprises a replication of electrical energy emitted during a desired exothermic reaction.
46. The method as in claim 45, wherein the electrical stimulation replicates the emitted energy but with greater amplitude.
47. The method as in claim 1, wherein the electrical stimulation is a direct current voltage and an alternating current voltage applied concurrently between separate anodes and a common cathode.
48. The method as in claim 1, wherein the electrical stimulation is a direct current voltage and an alternating current voltage applied concurrently between a common anode and a common cathode.
49. The method as in claim 1, wherein the electrical stimulation is a direct current voltage and an alternating current voltage applied sequentially between separate anodes and a common cathode.
50. The method as in claim 1, wherein the electrical stimulation is a direct current voltage and an alternating current voltage applied sequentially between a common anode and a common cathode.
51. The method as in claim 1, wherein the light source providing the photonic stimulation of the solution is modulated.
52. The method as in claim 51, wherein the light source is square-wave modulated.
53. The method as in claim 51, wherein the light source is pulse-modulated.
54. The method as in claim 51, wherein the light source is modulated with a frequency that varies or hops.
55. The method as in claim 1, wherein the light source providing the photonic stimulation of the solution comprises a set of intensity-modulated light emitting diodes directing light pulses into the solution.
56. The method as in claim 55, wherein the light emitting diodes are white.
57. The method as in claim 1, wherein the electrical and photonic stimulation are provided over an extended time period of at least 40 minutes and in which at least a specified number of heat bursts have been detected.
58. The method as in claim 1, wherein the combination of electrical and photonic stimulation of the electrodes and electrolytic solution is such as to stimulate a quantum effect that affects the wave-particle duality of the electrons as they migrate across the solution toward the electrodes.
59. The method as in claim 1, wherein the combination of electrical and photonic stimulation of the electrodes and electrolytic solution is such as to modify the surface of at least one of the electrodes so as to facilitate electron tunneling at that surface.