richarde wrote:
I don't see how this is possible as the reaction for burning hydrogen will create water. The reaction is:
H2 + O2 ---> H2O + Heat
(taken from
http://www2.asd.k12.ak.us/hauser/curriculum/html/IS9/Chemistry/Unit%206%20Chemical%20Reactions/Notes%20and%20Handouts/Chemical_Reactions_reading.htm)
So essentially it is saying that by breaking water apart then joining it together again you are going to get a net energy gain. Even if both processes are 100% efficient which they aren't you would have a net energy gain/loss of 0.
If it was all as easy as they say then we would have been running our cars on water instead of petrol for the past 100 years.
This would be true in a closed system, but as the electrolysis could occur via an external power source such as a battery, it could work.
So if the seperation occured via battery, which could recharged via an alternator and the difference topped up by a powerpoint recharge, then you could run the thing. It would consue more power than it would produce, but the aim is cheap fuel not perpetual motion.
Petrol engines equally ineffiicent and liberate stuff all energy from petrol. The difference is that the energy input happend millions of years ago, not in the engine bay.
I know the answer nuclear powered minis, but I stilll havent overcome the accident issue.