The Crystal Cell: molecular oscillations into electrical current
Until now we have been able to create a first generation energy conversion device, the Crystal Cell or Reid-Cell, that generates a small electrical current under permanent load since 1999.
The hypothesis suggests that the generated electrical energy is mainly integrated from the quantum vacuum (space-time structure) via the quantum critical behavior of water molecules at room temperature.
“In ‘Nuclear quantum effects and hydrogen bond fluctuations in water,’ we show, using state-of-the-art techniques that allow for quantum mechanical effects in the motion of the electrons and nuclei, that room-temperature water is not simply a molecular liquid; its protons experience wild excursions along the hydrogen bond (HB) network driven by quantum fluctuations, which result in an unexpectedly large probability of transient autoionization events” (Ceriotti, Cuny, Parrinello, & Manolopoulos, 2013, University of Oxford and University of California, Berkeley, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1308560110).