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Revision as of 13:52, 18 March 2009
Martin Fleischmann, (born March 29, 1927 in Karlovy Vary, Czechoslovakia) is a British chemist noted for his work in electrochemistry. He came to wider public prominence following his controversial publication of work with colleague Stanley Pons on cold fusion using palladium in the 1980s and '90s.
Fleischmann moved to England in 1938 with his family. He received a Ph D from Imperial College London in 1950. Fleischmann went on to teach at Durham University. In 1967, aged 40, Fleischmann became Professor of Electrochemistry at the University of Southampton. From 1970 to 1972, he was president of the International Society of Electrochemists. In 1979, he was awarded the medal for electrochemistry and thermodynamics by the Royal Society of London, and in 1986 was elected to the Fellowship of the Royal Society. He retired from teaching in 1983 and was given an honorary professorship at Southampton University. In 1974, he and coworkers were the first to report what was later called Surface enhanced Raman spectroscopy.
Around 1983, while they were researchers at the University of Utah, he and Stanley Pons found what they believed a way to create nuclear fusion at room temperatures. Fleischmann wanted to publish it first on an obscure journal, and had already spoken with a team that was doing similar work in a different university for a joint publication. The details have not surfaced, but it would seem that the University of Utah wanted to establish priority over the discovery and its patents by making a public announcement before the publication. This decision would later cause heavy criticism against Fleischmann and Pons, being perceived as a breach of how science is usually communicated to other scientists.
In March 23, 1989, it was finally announced at a press conference as "N-Fusion", which was quickly labeled by the press as cold fusion -- a result previously thought to be unattainable. In March 26 Fleischmann warned on the Wall Street Journal Report not to try replications until a published paper was available two weeks later in Journal of electroanalytical chemistry, but that didn't stop hundreds of scientists who had already started work at their laboratories the moment they heard the news on March 23, and more often than not they failed to reproduce the effects. Those who failed to reproduce the claim attacked the pair for fraudulent, sloppy and unethical work, incomplete unreproducible and inaccurate results, and erroneous interpretations. When the paper was finally published, both electrochemists and physicists called it "sloppy" and "uninformative", and it was said that, had Fleischmann and Pons waited for the publication of their paper, most of the trouble would have been avoided because scientists would not have gone so far in trying to test their work. Fleischmann and Pons sued an italian journalist that had published very harsh criticisms against them, but the judge rejected it saying that criticisms were appropiate (given the scientists' behaviour, the lack of evidence since the first announcement, and the desinterest of the scientific community), and that they were an expression of the journalist's "right of reporting". Fleischmann, Pons and the researchers who replicated the effect remain convinced the effect is real, but the scientific consensus is skeptical.
In 1992, Fleischmann moved to France with Pons, to work at the IMRA laboratory (part of Technova Corporation, a subsidiary of Toyota); the laboratory closed in 1998 after exhausting a research investment of 12 million pounds. The pair parted ways in 1995, and Fleischmann returned to Southampton, where he remained as of 1999. He has recently co-authored papers with researchers from the U.S. Navy and Italian national laboratories (INFN and ENEA).
In March 2006, "Solar Energy Limited" division "D2Fusion Inc" announced in a press release that Fleischmann, 79, would be acting as their senior scientific advisor.
Peer-reviewed papers
- Fleischmann, Martin; Pons, Stanley; Anderson, Mark W.; Li, Lian Jun; Hawkins, Marvin (1990), "Calorimetry of the palladium-deuterium-heavy water system", Journal of Electroanalytical Chemistry, 287: 293–348, doi:10.1016/0022-0728(90)80009-U
- Fleischmann, Martin; Pons, Stanley (1992), "Some Comments on The Paper 'Analysis of Experiments on The Calorimetry of LiOD-D2O Electrochemical Cells,' R.H. Wilson et al., Journal of Electroanalytical Chemistry, Vol. 332, (1992)", Journal of Electroanalytical Chemistry, 332: 33, doi:10.1016/0022-0728(92)80339-6
- Fleischmann, Martin (1993), "Calorimetry of the Pd-D2O system: from simplicity via complications to simplicity", Physics Letters A, 176 (1–2): 118–129, doi:10.1016/0375-9601(93)90327-V
Conference proceedings
- Fleischmann, Martin (2002), "Searching for the consequences of many-body effects in condensed phase systems", Proceedings of the 9th International Conference on Cold Fusion (PDF), Beijing: Tsinghua University Press, ISBN 7-302-06489-X
- Fleischmann, Martin (2003), "Background to cold fusion: the genesis of a concept", Tenth International Conference on Cold Fusion, Cambridge, MA: World Scientific Publishing, ISBN 978-9812565648
Notes
- ^ Shelley, Tom (October 2006). "Tiny reflectors boost sensing a billion". Eureka. Retrieved 2007-12-27.
- Charles Platt (November 1998). "What If Cold Fusion Is Real?". Wired. p. 2.
{{cite news}}
:|author=
has generic name (help) - ^ William J. Broad. "Brilliance and Recklessness Seen in Fusion Collaboration". The New York Times.
{{cite news}}
: Text "date 1989-05-09" ignored (help) -
"Fellows of the Royal Society" (pdf). The Royal Society. August 2008. Retrieved 17-02-2009.
{{cite web}}
: Check date values in:|accessdate=
(help) -
Fleischmann, M. (15 May 1974). "Raman Spectra of Pyridine Adsorbed at a Silver Electrode". Chemical Physics Letters. 26 (2): 163–166. doi:10.1016/0009-2614(74)85388-1.
{{cite journal}}
: Unknown parameter|coauthors=
ignored (|author=
suggested) (help) - ^ Shamoo, 2003, 86
- ^ Simon, 2002, 28-36
- Fleischmann, Martin; Pons, Stanley; Hawkins, M. (1989), "Electrochemically induced nuclear fusion of deuterium", Journal of Electroanalytical Chemistry, 261 (2A): 301–308, doi:10.1016/0022-0728(89)80006-3, and errata in Vol. 263.
- Simon, 2002, page 35
- ^ Shamoo, 2003, pages 76, 97
- Henry Krips, J. E. McGuire, Trevor Melia (1995). University of Pittsburgh Press (ed.). Science, Reason, and Rhetoric (illustrated ed.). pp. xvi. ISBN 0822939126.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ Simon, 2002, p. 119
- Michael B. Schiffer, Kacy L. Hollenback, Carrie L. Bell (2003). University of California Press (ed.). Draw the Lightning Down: Benjamin Franklin and Electrical Technology in the Age of Enlightenment (illustrated ed.). pp. 207. ISBN 0520238028.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ Taubes, Gary (1993). Bad science: the short life and weird times of cold fusion. New York: Random House. p. 6. ISBN 0-394-58456-2.
- Thomas F. Gieryn (1999). University of Chicago Press (ed.). Cultural Boundaries of Science: Credibility on the Line (illustrated ed.). pp. http://books.google.com/books?id=GljD3CHbDx0C&pg=PA204 204]. ISBN 0226292622.
- Simon, 2002,
- Simon, 2002, pags. 110-112
- Robert L. Park (2002). Oxford University Press (ed.). Voodoo Science: The Road from Foolishness to Fraud (reprint ed.). pp. 123–124. ISBN 0198604432.
- Voss, David, What Ever Happened to Cold Fusion, Physics World, March 1, 1999, retrieved May 1, 2008 from: http://physicsworld.com/cws/article/print/1258
- Szpak, S., et al., Thermal behavior of polarized Pd/D electrodes prepared by co-deposition. Thermochim. Acta, 2004. 410: p. 101.
- Mosier-Boss, P.A. and M. Fleischmann, Thermal and Nuclear Aspects of the Pd/D2O System, ed. S. Szpak and P.A. Mosier-Boss. Vol. 2. Simulation of the Electrochemical Cell (ICARUS) Calorimetry. 2002: SPAWAR Systems Center, San Diego, U.S. Navy.
- Del Giudice, E., et al. Loading of H(D) in a Pd lattice. in The 9th International Conference on Cold Fusion, Condensed Matter Nuclear Science. 2002. Tsinghua Univ., Beijing, China: Tsinghua University Press
References
- Physics Web article by David Voss
- SIMON, Bart (2002). Rutgers University Press (ed.). Undead Science: Science Studies and the Afterlife of Cold Fusion (illustrated ed.). ISBN 0813531543.
- SHAMOO Adil E. Shamoo, David B. Resnik (2003). Oxford University Press US (ed.). Responsible Conduct of Research (2, illustrated ed.). ISBN 0195148460.</ref>