Morphology of fission gas bubbles in fissioning uranium metal closely
ORAL
Abstract
We investigate by SEM the micro-structural and basic phenomenological mechanisms governing the fission-gas and fusion-gas behaviour in metals. This comparative study clearly shows the characteristics of fission-gas bubbles (primarily helium and xenon) in uranium fuel metals have the same characteristics as fusion-gas bubbles (helium) in the solid-state fusion metal - palladium. The remarkably similar characteristic morphology clearly identifies the nuclear phenomenological origins of the gas bubbles in the palladium metal which are correllated and explained by the presence of a large amount of DD fusion. Allied evidence of anomalous heat production during cold fusion experiments suggests the nuclear process. Further analysis of these fusion metals by mass spectroscopy clearly identifies anomalous helium isotopes in large quantity were trapped in the palladium metal.
Authors
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Russ George
D2Fusion Inc. San Francisco, CA, - D2Fusion Inc. San Francisco,CA