Gassification is the key.
hi group,
The only way to get the mileage and clean burn from petroleum,
Ive found is by continuing to refine IT into gasses Using the old "water shift reaction".
Engines LOVE gasses and HATE liquids as fuel, for a number of reasons.
I suggest starting with kerosene its far more forgiving than gasoline and its clean.
Vaporize the kerosene into white smoke;
Mix with steam, hydrogen, exhaust gasses, or even air(dirtier);
Raise the temps as hi as possible with corona, plasma or thermal heat (using the exhaust ultimately)
Refine the kerosene into clear <C5 hydrocarbons and immediately consume them.
Clear permanent gasses, no longer a condensable liquid vapor. And no-longer kerosene.
last photo is me finding the autoignition temp of an unknown vegetable oil, the glass broke in the cold ambient air all the way around where the surface of the hot oil was!
Jetijs:
looks good but if you plan to turn your back on it, add a pressure relief electric cutoff switch and a pressure relief valve. Hint: there is one on every domestic water heater, some have em both.
Best regards
Dave
hi group,
The only way to get the mileage and clean burn from petroleum,
Ive found is by continuing to refine IT into gasses Using the old "water shift reaction".
Engines LOVE gasses and HATE liquids as fuel, for a number of reasons.
I suggest starting with kerosene its far more forgiving than gasoline and its clean.
Vaporize the kerosene into white smoke;
Mix with steam, hydrogen, exhaust gasses, or even air(dirtier);
Raise the temps as hi as possible with corona, plasma or thermal heat (using the exhaust ultimately)
Refine the kerosene into clear <C5 hydrocarbons and immediately consume them.
Clear permanent gasses, no longer a condensable liquid vapor. And no-longer kerosene.
last photo is me finding the autoignition temp of an unknown vegetable oil, the glass broke in the cold ambient air all the way around where the surface of the hot oil was!
Jetijs:
looks good but if you plan to turn your back on it, add a pressure relief electric cutoff switch and a pressure relief valve. Hint: there is one on every domestic water heater, some have em both.
Best regards
Dave
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