About Robert Buxbaum, REB Research, and The Blog

Robert Buxbaum is a kind, yet innovative author and scientist. This blog is his latest attempt to get his ideas out; both out of him and out to the world. It is also an attempt to get customers for his company, REB Research, a maker of hydrogen separations equipment, and membrane reactor hydrogen generators. I also do consulting, BTW.

Robert Buxbaum got his PhD trying to help develop useful separations technology for the nuclear fusion program. This lead to a PhD thesis at Princeton that he thought was full of important insights about science, engineering, and useful quantum mechanics, but few people read it in its original form. To make matters worse, fusion itself stalled so that no power-producing reactor was ever built, and his (my) hydrogen separations ideas seemed to be lost. Here’s a picture of me with my PhD chums.

Dr. Buxbaum then became a professor of chemical engineering at a midwestern state university (MSU), where he advised students, taught, and produced some 70 technical papers and several patents. More good, new ideas, and more people read the papers than read the thesis, but still little impact as such. So long as Buxbaum was at MSU, no one used the patents or built anything described in the papers. Many of the students went on to do good things, but he noticed that the high-paid ones that seemed to control things were the managers, not the engineers.

The author, Robert Buxbaum, enjoys a day at an artificial beach in central Detroit.

Dr. Buxbaum figured business management was ‘the way to go’ and started REB Research so he could be the owner-manager. Here, he patented some more stuff, mostly dealing with hydrogen, but you had to have regular customers for a company to really succeed. So what does he do while waiting for customers? He thinks about science, and politics, and his products, his competitors, and his markets; improves his products, tries to make sales, and writes the occasional technical article. Dr. Buxbaum started this blog as a way to publish his essays and ramblings and perhaps interest customers. Generally he writes his blogs in the first person, “I” or “we”, but you’ll notice that this page is written the third person. It’s an attempt to appear more objective and truthful, like someone else is describing him. The invention that he is most proud of is a better designed membrane reactor. See here for how and why membrane reactors work. here’s a visit by a local news magazine, and here is some things you might want to do with hydrogen.

354 thoughts on “About Robert Buxbaum, REB Research, and The Blog

  1. Pingback: Grammar on the high seas, pirate joke, trans ready | REB Research Blog

  2. Pingback: Slowing Cancer with Fish and Unhealth Food | REB Research Blog

  3. Pingback: A shaggy dog story | REB Research Blog

  4. Pingback: Highest temperature superconductor so far: H2S | REB Research Blog

  5. Pingback: Forced diversity of race is racist | REB Research Blog

  6. Pingback: Nestle pays 1/4,000 what you pay for water | REB Research Blog

  7. Pingback: The french engineering | REB Research Blog

  8. Pingback: Veteran owned business startup ideas | REB Research Blog

  9. Pingback: Of Scrooge and rising wheat production | REB Research Blog

  10. Pingback: Thermal stress failure | REB Research Blog

  11. Pingback: Eight ways to not fix the tower of Pisa, and one that worked. | REB Research Blog

  12. Pingback: Girls are doing better, Boys are doing far worse. | REB Research Blog

  13. Pingback: A plague of combined sewers | REB Research Blog

  14. Pingback: Follow the feces; how to stop the poisoning | REB Research Blog

  15. Pingback: June 14 1789, First Bourbon whiskey | REB Research Blog

  16. Pingback: A Nuclear-blast resistant paint: Starlite and co. | REB Research Blog

  17. Pingback: The claim that Ukrainians are Nazis is also Ukraine’s claim to statehood. | REB Research Blog

  18. Pingback: Rain barrels aren’t much good. Wood chips are better, And I’d avoid rain gardens, even as a neighbor. | REB Research Blog

  19. Pingback: Disease, atom bombs, and R-naught | REB Research Blog

  20. Pingback: How to avoid wet basements | REB Research Blog

  21. Pingback: Why does water cost what it does? | REB Research Blog

  22. Pingback: What I learned by running for office. | REB Research Blog

  23. Pingback: On gays, God, and owning Canadians | REB Research Blog

  24. Pingback: Loyalty, part 2: power hurts the leader | REB Research Blog

  25. Pingback: General Tso’s chicken | REB Research Blog

  26. Pingback: Crime: US vs UK and Canada | REB Research Blog

  27. Pingback: What is learning? | REB Research Blog

  28. Pingback: Einstein failed high-school math –not. | REB Research Blog

  29. Pingback: Heat conduction in insulating blankets, aerogels, space shuttle tiles, etc. | REB Research Blog

  30. Pingback: Hydrogen transport in metallic membranes | REB Research Blog

  31. Pingback: Control engineer joke | REB Research Blog

  32. Pingback: Tests designed so that the Ivies pick preppies. | REB Research Blog

  33. Pingback: How to make fine lemonade | REB Research Blog

  34. Pingback: Why random experimental design is better | REB Research Blog

  35. Pingback: Puerto Rico’s minimum wage and statehood | REB Research Blog

  36. Pingback: Golfball dimples on a car for improved mpg. | REB Research Blog

  37. Pingback: The Great, New York to Paris, Automobile race of 1908. | REB Research Blog

  38. Pingback: Much of the chemistry you learned is wrong | REB Research Blog

  39. Pingback: The hydrogen jerrycan | REB Research Blog

  40. Pingback: Making semi-traditional STAM ink using walnuts. | REB Research Blog

  41. Pingback: Automobile power 2021: Batteries vs gasoline and hydrogen | REB Research Blog

  42. Pingback: It’s rocket science | REB Research Blog

  43. Pingback: Seeing Entropy, the most important pattern in life | REB Research Blog

  44. Pingback: Qatar, unbalanced but stable | REB Research Blog

  45. Pingback: The future of steamships: steam | REB Research Blog

  46. Pingback: Is cannibal tourism good for Michigan? | REB Research Blog

  47. Pingback: Deadly screw sizes, avoid odd numbers and UNF. | REB Research Blog

  48. Pingback: Einstein’s fuzzy slippers — and a fetish lawyer joke | REB Research Blog

  49. Pingback: Theodore Roosevelt jumps fence, rides moose | REB Research Blog

  50. Pingback: A high minimum wage killed Detroit, perhaps Seattle and NYC too. | REB Research Blog

Leave a Reply