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Fuel-less combustion of AIR !!!

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  • #61
    Originally posted by tutanka View Post
    Depend what gas processor you want.. old or new?
    Hi Tut,
    What is the advantage of the new vs old processor? Any videos of running a gas engine with your gas processors?
    Cheers Mike

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    • #62
      Originally posted by tutanka View Post
      Sorry but you no need 7LPM probabbly you refer to the meyer docs. You can buy or use an normal electrolizer that produce 1-1,5LPM of watergas.
      Ok Tutanka.
      I understand that I will use an electrolyser with electrolyte and consumption from maybe 130 to 180 volts / amps, this arises?

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      • #63
        @ tutanka,
        Any update on the air proccessor? Haven't seen the site updated yet. Thanks.

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        • #64
          Originally posted by Faisca View Post
          Ok Tutanka.
          I understand that I will use an electrolyser with electrolyte and consumption from maybe 130 to 180 volts / amps, this arises?
          Depend from what you want.. surely the final system use ONLY tap water not distilled water and electrolyte. As Jules Verne wrote in the Mysterious Island.. water to heat water..

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          • #65
            catalyst substitute?

            So I'm wondering if its possible to use permanent magnets and leds to create the autothermia process, to eliminate using the worlds most precious metal $$$. Since the platinum is being used as a catalyst to ionize nitrogen, I think substituting photoionization could eliminate the need for platinum. Its very expensive. Testing is needed.

            Has anyone been able to locate any of the referenced articles by Andreiev? The only article I can find is the issue 22 pdf with the autothermia process. I can not find the Fundamentals of natural energy, 2004 article.

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            • #66
              The photons of a light beam have a characteristic energy proportional to the frequency of the light. In the photoemission process, if an electron within some material absorbs the energy of one photon and acquires more energy than the work function (the electron binding energy) of the material, it is ejected. If the photon energy is too low, the electron is unable to escape the material. Increasing the intensity of the light beam increases the number of photons in the light beam, and thus increases the number of electrons excited, but does not increase the energy that each electron possesses. The energy of the emitted electrons does not depend on the intensity of the incoming light, but only on the energy or frequency of the individual photons. It is an interaction between the incident photon and the outermost electron.
              Electrons can absorb energy from photons when irradiated, but they usually follow an "all or nothing" principle. All of the energy from one photon must be absorbed and used to liberate one electron from atomic binding, or else the energy is re-emitted. If the photon energy is absorbed, some of the energy liberates the electron from the atom, and the rest contributes to the electron's kinetic energy as a free particle.[6][7][8]\\

              Photoelectric effect - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
              The pure in heart will see the light.

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