One of the two 1 watt heaters exposed.
View inside the water reservoir where the pumps can be seen with a filter.
View of the Calorimeter, the water reservoir, and the heat pump all together in the lab.
The calorimeter in the lab with the laptop for it.
View of entire apparatus in the workshop before it was brought out to the lab.
View of the heat pump unit as it was on the development bench.
View of the data acquisition and control boards. They are mounted to the foam, but not enclosed, since they generate heat and would change their own temperature a lot if insulated.
Thermistor plugged into the tubing.
Another view of a thermistor in a fitting.
Diagram of the water reservoir and flow.
Fully labelled image of the calorimeter core with LENR-Stick test cell isntalled.
Photo of the multi-wire LENR-stick probe with key parts labelled.
Diagram of the core of the calorimeter.
Calorimeter core with the multi-wire LENR-stick in place.
Malachi lifting the top two layers of the insulation up to expose the core of the calorimeter.
View of the core of the calorimeter with a resistance heater in place
View of edge of thermal isolation plates - two aluminum plates with a gap between them. Near the center of the plates are two heat exchanger blocks that the water runs through.
Another view of the thermal isolation plate
Top thermal plate of the calorimeter - temperature controlled water from the reservoir is pumped through a heat exchanger block mounted between rwo aluminum plates to help isolate the calorimeter beneath it from ambient temperature swings. Ambient isolation is key to making precice calorimetry, especially when you are measureing temperature rise to the milli-Kelvin.
Water reservoir for flow calorimeter. The tubes on the right go tot he solid state heat pump. The tubes onteh left go to the calorimeter.
Solid state heat pump - made from a thermo-electric assembly we had lying around, this can pump at least 200 watts out of the water reservoir. That is enough to handle at least a half dozen calorimeters simultaneously.
Water flow lines feeding the bottom plate, the top plate, and two lines to the core calorimeter. Note the precision flow adjuster valve that sets the rough flow range to the calorimeter.
A view of the soldering on the copper shell.
Entire copper calorimeter shell
Copper calormieter shell - connection end.
Copper calorimeter shell - Closed end. Notice that the closed end is fit with a very expensive, precision machined plug.
This is the thermistor and heater fittings. The orange/orange/white pair of wires goes to the thermistor. The other fitting is one of the heaters.
The thermistor and heater fittings
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PS - I love the "In God We Trust" firmly embedded into the manufacture of this fixture! : )
@Al, it's great to see your interest expressed and as always, your input in valued by everyone.
Other than that, great idea! Best of luck.
iccf18.research.missouri.edu/. ../...
It appears that George Miley uses 60-100 psi (4.1-6.8 bar) in his Ni-H cells and, reading along the lines, that it is a necessary condition for excess heat to show. Celani uses relatively high pressures too, so I wonder if it shouldn't be better to stick with them rather keep using atmospheric pressures.
Errors caused by a change in temperature gradient around the tube circumference will be very small.
More important would be the errors caused by a change in temperature gradient along the length of the tube. That is minimised by having the water flow both directions along the length.
With the current setup (tube running along a portion of the sides of the main 3/4" tube) if for some reason the heat flow inside the 3/4" tube changes once you install the multiwire LENR stick or swap it with something else, the initial calibration might end up not being valid anymore.
What you want is to exchange heat with as much 3/4" tube area as possible to avoid or at least greatly mitigate such potential problems.
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