Michael McKubre | |
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![]() Michael McKubre working on deuterium gas-based cold fusion cell used by SRI International. | |
Born | |
Alma mater | Victoria University of Wellington |
Scientific career | |
Fields | cold fusion |
Institutions | SRI International |
Thesis | An Impedance Study of the Membrane Polarisation Effect in Simulated Rock Systems (1976) |
Doctoral advisor | John Tomlinson |
Michael Charles Harold McKubre is an electrochemist involved withcold fusion energy research.[1][2] McKubre was the director of the Energy Research Center atSRI International in 1998.[3] He is a native of New Zealand.[2]
McKubre completed two degrees atVictoria University of Wellington, aMaster's degree in 1972, titledA Study of the Frequency Domain Induced Polarisation Effects Displayed by Clay and by Cation Exchange Resin, Model Soil Systems,[4] followed by aPhD in 1976 on membrane polarisation effects in simulated rock systems.[5]
From 1989 to 2002, he researched cold fusion at SRI International.[6] Unlike other researchers in the same field, he obtained mainstream funding during all his research: first from theElectric Power Research Institute, then from the Japanese government, and in 2002 he had funding from the U.S. government.[6]
In January 1992 a cold fusion cell exploded in an SRI lab. One of McKubre's collaborators was killed and three people including McKubre were wounded.[3][7] McKubre still has pieces of glass embedded in his side. Subsequent experiments were done behind bulletproof glass.[2]
In 2004 he and other cold fusion researchers asked theUnited States Department of Energy (DOE) to give a new review to the field of cold fusion, and he co-authored a report with all the available experimental and theoretical evidence since the 1989 review. The 2004 review concluded that "while significant progress has been made in the sophistication ofcalorimeters since the review of this subject in 1989, the conclusions reached by the reviewers today are similar to those found in the 1989 review."[8]
As of 2010, he was still making experiments with palladium cells at SRI International,[9] and collaborates with theENEA laboratory, where the most reliable palladium is being produced.[1] McKubre more recently took part as one of the 22 physicists of theSteorn "jury".
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: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link) (manuscript) Paper listing the available experimental evidence of cold fusion.For years the experiments took place behind bulletproof glass, the result of a 1992 accident that killed one of his colleagues. McKubre still has bits of glass embedded in his side from the cold fusion experiment that exploded that day in his lab (the blast had nothing to do with fusion; hydrogen mixed with oxygen, creating the equivalent of rocket fuel).
an explosion in January 1992 caused a cold fusion cell at SRI International in Menlo Park to blow up violently while Andrew Riley was bending over it, killing him instantly and wounding three other researchers, including Michael McKubre, who headed SRI's research team (the incident is described in New Scientist, 11 January 1992, 1803, p. 12ff).
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