From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Martin Fleischmann (born March 29, 1927) is a
British chemist noted for his work in
electrochemistry. He came to wider
public prominence[3]
following his controversial publication of work with colleague Stanley Pons on cold fusion using palladium in the 1980s and
'90s.
Life and
career
Born in Karlovy
Vary, Czechoslovakia, Fleischmann moved to England in 1938 with his
family. He received a PhD from Imperial College London in
1950. Fleischmann went on to teach at King's College, Durham University,
which in 1963 became the newly established University of Newcastle upon
Tyne.[4][5] In
1967, aged 40, Fleischmann became Professor of Electrochemistry at
the University of
Southampton.[6]
From 1970 to 1972, he was president of the International Society of
Electrochemists.[7]
In 1974 he discovered Surface Enhanced Raman Scattering effect
(SERS).[8] 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.[9] He
retired from teaching in 1983 and was given an honorary
professorship at Southampton University.[7]
In 1974, he and coworkers were the first to report what was later
called Surface enhanced Raman
spectroscopy.[3]
[10]
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.[11][12]
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.[11][12]
In an interview with 60 Minutes on April 19, 2009, Fleishchmann
said that the public announcement was the university's idea, and
that he regretted doing it.[13] 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.[12]
On March 23, 1989, it was finally announced at a press
conference as "a sustained nuclear fusion reaction,"[14] which
was quickly labeled by the press as cold fusion[15][16] -- a
result previously thought to be unattainable. On 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,[17]
and more often than not they failed to reproduce the effects.[18]
Those who failed to reproduce the claim attacked the pair for
fraudulent,[18][19]
sloppy[18][20][21] and
unethical work,[18]
incomplete[20]
unreproducible[22]
and inaccurate[22]
results, and erroneous interpretations.[23] 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.[11][24]
Fleischmann and Pons sued an Italian journalist who had published
very harsh criticisms against them, but the judge rejected it
saying that criticisms were appropriate given the scientists'
behaviour, the lack of evidence since the first announcement, and
the disinterest of the scientific community, and that they were an
expression of the journalist's "right of reporting".[25][26]
Fleischmann, Pons and the researchers who replicated the effect
remain convinced the effect is real, but the general scientific
community remains skeptical.
Retirement and recent
work
In 1992, Fleischmann moved to France with Pons to continue their
work at the IMRA laboratory (part of Technova Corporation, a
subsidiary of Toyota), but in
1995 he retired and returned to England.[27]
Fleischmann has more recently co-authored papers with
researchers from the U.S. Navy[28][29] and
Italian national laboratories (INFN and ENEA),[30] still
on the subject of cold fusion.
In March 2006, "Solar Energy Limited" division "D2Fusion Inc"
announced in a press release that Fleischmann, then 79, would be
acting as their senior scientific advisor.[1]
Fleischmann suffers from Parkinson's
Disease, and lives near Salisbury, England.[31]
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, 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
- ^ Taubes, Gary (1993). Bad science: the
short life and weird times of cold fusion. New York: Random
House. pp. 6. ISBN
0-394-58456-2.
- ^ Voss, D (1999-03-01). "What Ever Happened to Cold
Fusion". Physics World. http://physicsworld.com/cws/article/print/1258. Retrieved
2008-05-01.
- ^ a
b
Shelley, Tom (October 2006). "Tiny reflectors boost sensing
a billion". Eureka. http://www.shelleys.demon.co.uk/foct06ra.htm. Retrieved
2007-12-27.
- ^
Covington, A. K.
(1995), "Obituary : Harold Reginald Thirsk (1915–1995)",
Electrochimica Acta 40: xii, doi:10.1016/0013-4686(95)90227-9
- ^
King's College, Official
Records of Durham University.
- ^ Charles Platt (November 1998). "What If Cold Fusion Is
Real?". Wired: p. 2. http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/6.11/coldfusion.html?pg=2&topic=&topic_set=.
- ^ a
b
William J. Broad (1989-05-09). "Brilliance and Recklessness
Seen in Fusion Collaboration". The New York
Times. http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=950DE4DA163CF93AA35756C0A96F948260&sec=&spon=&pagewanted=all.
- ^
Fleischmann, M.;
PJ Hendra and AJ McQuillan (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.
- ^
"Fellows of the Royal
Society" (pdf). The Royal Society. August 2008. http://royalsociety.org/downloaddoc.asp?id=5150. Retrieved
2009-02-17.
- ^
Fleischmann, M.;
PJ Hendra and AJ McQuillan (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.
- ^ a
b
c
Shamoo, 2003, 86
- ^ a
b
c
Simon, 2002, 28-36
- ^
Cold Fusion is Hot Again, CBS News http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2009/04/17/60minutes/main4952167_page4.shtml
- ^
Press release, published in Huizenga, Cold fusion, Oxford
University Press, 1989, p. 289
- ^
Bart Simon, Undead science: Science studies and the afterlife
of cold fusion, Rutgers University Press, 2002, p. 39, citing
Jerry Bishop, Wall Street
Journal, Research in Utah to announce a development in
fusion energy, March 23, 1989, or Scientist sticks to
claimed test-tube fusion advance, March 27.
- ^
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
- ^ a
b
c
d
Shamoo, 2003, pages 76, 97
- ^
Henry Krips, J. E. McGuire, Trevor
Melia (1995). University of Pittsburgh
Press. ed. Science, Reason, and Rhetoric (illustrated
ed.). Pittsburgh, Pa.: University of Pittsburgh Press. pp. xvi. ISBN
0822939126.
- ^ a
b
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.). Berkeley, Calif.: Univ. of California Press. pp. 207. ISBN
0520238028.
- ^ a
b
Taubes, Gary (1993). Bad science:
the short life and weird times of cold fusion. New York: Random House.
pp. 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.).
Chicago: University of Chicago Press. pp. 204. ISBN 0226292622. http://books.google.com/books?id=GljD3CHbDx0C&pg=PA204.
- ^ Simon, 2002, p. 43
- ^ Simon, 2002, pags.
110-112
- ^
Robert L. Park (2002). Oxford University Press. ed. Voodoo Science: The Road
from Foolishness to Fraud (reprint ed.). Oxford: Oxford
University Press. pp. 123–124. ISBN 0198604432. http://books.google.com/books?id=xzCK6-Kqs6QC&pg=PA123&dq=Giuliano+preparata+Repubblica&lr=&as_brr=3&client=opera&hl=es.
- ^ Simon, 2002, p. 137
- ^
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
- ^
Cartwright, J. (2009) "Fusion in a cold climate", New Scientist,
18 Jul: 28-29
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.). New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers
University Press. ISBN
0813531543.
- SHAMOO Adil E. Shamoo, David B.
Resnik (2003). Oxford University Press US. ed.
Responsible Conduct of Research (2, illustrated ed.).
Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN
0195148460.
External
links