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Re: mr_sano post# 35290

Friday, 12/02/2016 11:44:21 PM

Friday, December 02, 2016 11:44:21 PM

Post# of 56583
INCORRECT. From todays 8K about the "large" Canadian oil company & the NDA :

http://ir.qsenergy.com/all-sec-filings/content/0001683168-16-000840/qsenergy_8k-120116.htm

On November 28, 2016, QS Energy, Inc. (the “Company”) entered into a Field Test Agreement (“Agreement”) with a large Canadian oil company, located in Calgary, Alberta (“COC”). The Agreement confirms COC’s desire to field test (the “Field Test”) the Company’s AOT Viscosity Reduction System (the “AOT Technology” or “AOT”) at a COC facility utilizing a fully functional laboratory-scale AOT device (the “AOT-Lab”) to assess the technical capability of the AOT Technology under field operating conditions

The name of the COC has been redacted on confidentiality grounds.

With respect to any Confidential Information, the Confidentiality Agreement shall govern the use and non-disclosure obligations of
the Parties
.


More from Temple University's web site. The is more FACTUAL & the TRUTH about the PROVEN AOT & TRANSCANADA.

https://cst.temple.edu/about/news/enhancing-crude-oil-pipeline-flow


An electrical device designed by professor of physics Rongjia Tao, which significantly enhances the flow of crude oil through pipelines, has been successfully tested on existing U.S. portions of the Keystone Pipeline by the TransCanada Corp.

Tao’s applied oil technology (AOT) device greatly reduces the viscosity and turbulence of crude oil. Patented by Temple University, the device was created with the financial support of Save The World Air, a Santa Barbara, California-based developer and vendor of commercial flow assurance solutions.

Utilizing electrorheology principles, Tao’s devices have been installed just downstream from pipeline pumps. The electrical field polarizes suspended nanoparticles found in crude oil, causing them to aggregate in short chains along the flow direction—which both decreases viscosity in that direction and effectively suppressing turbulence. This green technology may eliminate the need to heat the crude oil, a current costly industry standard, while significantly reducing required pumping pressures.

Tests have verified viscosity decreases of 40 percent. “It also reduces the power needed to pump crude oil by 72 percent while the flow rate is unchanged,” added Tao. “And by reducing pumping pressures, it’s much safer for both land-based pipelines and pipelines that connect with off-shore drilling sites.”