Originally posted by jaden101
You'd still need those fossil fuels for those uses though. Hence the reason Oil companies wouldn't be out of pocket to a huge degree. Their oil is used for far more than just producing energy and those needs can't be met by cold fusionI believe they said the heavy hydrogen could be extracted from water easily enough (which it can) but as for recycling Palladium?...I must've missed that bit but it's also irrelevant anyway...Palladium is an even more finite resource than oil. There's only so much of it in the world. Once it's all mined then it's all used. It also has a lot of other uses in manufacturing. Not to mention there's then the massive enviromental cost of opening even more mines to extract it.
Palladium mining is also only profitable as a byproduct of mining for other minerals such as copper etc. It takes many tons of mined ground to produce 1 troy ounce of gold and done on it's own it wouldn't be profitable at all. So it wouldn't even be a case of finding a new source of Palladium but also one that produces something else to make the mining profitable.
I know this. But energy is tied to so many things. If you replace the primary source of it, it eliminates a lot of profit that could be made. Do you think Exxon makes it's big bucks from the plastic bowls you and I eat out of? Profit is at the gas pump.
Also, Palladium shouldn't be the only metal that this works. Also, I think you're right. It has something to do with the arrangement of the attoms (crystalline structure) and how the hydrogen can interact with the electrons of those atoms.
However, they didn't go nearly enough into detail to even come close to to explaining it well enough.
And, yes, turning a profit would be a big deal.
And what is the chemistry term for liberating hydrogen from a used substrate?