Author Topic: The basics of electrolysis  (Read 12685 times)

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Re: The basics of electrolysis
« Reply #8 on: April 24, 2010, 11:15:48 am »
Here a doc of Bockris.

Fabio, please have a look at it.
It explains some methodes.
One if it is the rotating methode of magnets which create a potential diff and make hydrogen that way.

Steve

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Re: The basics of electrolysis
« Reply #9 on: April 25, 2010, 21:01:16 pm »
Hi Steve,

I have being thinking about how to make the output of the car to be gas ions instead of Plain H20... maybe OH-, If you think about If our output from the exhaust could be OH we would double the number of reactions of the H2 we are injecting in the motor thus we could have instead of 18 grams reacting we would have 34 grams. This is almost the double of the mass reacted so if we have an increase in mass according to the relative theory Ein Gas // DET  Md  Cˆ2  you will also have an energy increase...

I was thinking about and i was thinking about a video i saw in youtube that was about electrostatic induction, and i was thinking about if it in base is't related to magnetism some how... well, i was thinking that what we are really having to do on what we call ionizer (gas processor...)  could induce charge on the gas by electrostatic induction for almost free because if you don't touch the conductors you won't discharge the dipole of the high voltage field.. . Meaning if you don't reach a spark ... That to say, maybe the gas processor didn't took much electrons of it just gave a charge on the gas as much as positive as it is possible, thus there would be the history where Meyer told us "hey i'm the big oxygen atom, you hydrogen come here lets bound together, but remaining the oxygen with an overall positive charge it won't allow other positive hydrogen to bound... OH+

Maybe?           

To give the gas a high positive charge, we should have a dielectric material such as aluminum oxide or something like to act in the negative voltage zone splitting the dielectric in two allowing the positive zone to be where the gas is passing...

I read about this on many ozone patents...

So we still need a considerable amount of hydrogen to run the car right ...

Well maybe if we could create O4 or O5 O6 i don't know maybe we could create molecules in the output like O2H O3H having a huge gain in mass, having a enormous amount of energy exceeding many thousand's barrels of oil with one liter of water...   Maybe .. LEts do the calculation to see if it works

E= m* c ^2

lets take 1 liter of water 1000g

the amount of gain in mass of oxygen if it would just become OH would be 888g so that would become 1888 grams, so we take

E = 1888g * c^288000000 m/s

E= 8.94e+16 I don't know the unit maybe joules...

 


 

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Re: The basics of electrolysis
« Reply #10 on: April 25, 2010, 21:24:33 pm »
yes Joule which is the same as kg * m² / s²

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Re: The basics of electrolysis
« Reply #11 on: April 27, 2010, 06:10:37 am »
If we could just know how true can be the theory i think we would have a big surprise...
I thought about it because of what steve said about having 30% gain using the ionizer...
Than i remembered about the lesson in the university that i got for coincidence and a video about electrostatic induction on youtube

http://regentsprep.org/Regents/physics/phys03/aeleclab/induct.htm


I'm going tomorrow to the chemistry institute just to ask if that molecules are possible possible...

Thank you Haithar for the unity

Regards to all