Saturday, October 12, 2019
Alternative Fuel :: Hydrogen Fuel H2/02
Hydrogen can be "packaged" in several ways, as a fuel gas in a H2/02 powered   engine or the newly devised solid state pellet of hydrogen isotopes that   contains about the equivalent of 5000 cubic feet of hydrogen and is broken down   and releases gas into the second chamber where it goes to the engine for use.   There are many ways to get pure hydrogen out of many compounds using methods   such as electrolysis and chemical reactions. One of the easiest ways is using a   chemical reaction. Simple chemicals (aluminum,sodium hydroxide, and water) can   be reacted in the home to produce heavy hydrogen to power your furnace or your   hot water heater . No electrical power at all is required. The reaction also   gives off a tremendous amount of heat. Even the waste heat could be captured for   heating the house. The resulting sodium aluminate is harmless and could be   collected at recoiling centers for complete acid/base neutralization. This way   is a simpler way than electrolysis produce hydrogen for heating the home,   because in a automobile it would be harder to do.     Electrolysis is another way to produce hydrogen electronically. It is a way that   I am more familiar with because I do it quite a bit in my room and have done   several experiments with it. Electrolysis will produce a 2:1 ratio of hydrogen   to oxygen out of water. higher voltages will give you faster collection. With a   12-volt battery it took around a half an hour to get a quarter of a mountain dew   bottle filled with a catalyst of a small amount of Baking Soda. I used it   because it was cheap and I knew it worked. Another time I used a 75 volt / 2 amp   power supply with a catalyst of 2 drops of sulfuric acid to a pint of water and   the result was very differing from the last time. I filled the whole mountain   dew bottle in less than 6 minutes. All of that gas came from a little less than   a drop of water(when I light it off there was only a little spec of water on the     					    
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.