Originally posted by Michael John Nunnerley
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Ammonia Production-Haber Process
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Last edited by tutanka; 06-07-2010, 10:45 PM.
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Originally posted by chasson321 View PostFigure 3 looks like it's working to me: YouTube - Stan Meyers water powered Buggy as this is the gaseous fuel injection system.
So please copy and past or use a photo of figure 3 of your own of the same drawing and place an arrow where the NH3 is being made on demand.
The one way you two have out of all of this is to denounce your claims of finding the key to Stanley Meyer's water for fuel technology and that your process is yet something totally new to science having nothing in common with the works of Stanley Meyer other than water being also used by your method.
This shows no chemical breakdown, or a balanced equation, and gives away no trade secrets all you are doing is placing an arrow where the NH3 is being made on demand nothing more.
Tim
IF YOU READ BETTER ON FIG.1 ON INJECTOR STAGE IS SPECIFIED ONLY HYDROGEN/OXYGEN FROM WFC NOT OTHER .. (SEE IMAGE ATTACHED) AND WITH ONLY THESE YOUR ENGIN CAN'T RUNLast edited by tutanka; 06-07-2010, 10:45 PM.
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Originally posted by Farrah Day View PostThe nitrogen is the least reactive element here and due to it's triple bond is quite stable.
"In other words, the breaking up of water into its constituent atoms is a two step process. The first step involves pulling off the first proton to
leave a "hydroxyl radical" (represented as OH). This requires a
wavelength of 243 nm. Translating that into temperature is a little
harder as it requires that we define temperature and that means that we
need to consider the vibrational modes of the molecule. That is more
difficult than space would allow, so simply put, it is 243 nm or 117.59
kcal/mol.
The second stage of turning H2O into 2H + O is the breaking up of the
hydroxyl radical which occurs at a slightly different energy and
wavelength (281 nm; 101.76 kcal/mol"
Bond dissociation energy - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Nitrogen Bond Dissociation Energy = 226 kcal/mole
Nitrogen is just as inert as water vapour.
Originally posted by Farrah Day View PostIn air it's actually classed as non-flammable!
"Ammonia does not burn readily or sustain combustion, except under narrow fuel-to-air mixtures of 15–25% air. "
Originally posted by chasson321 View Post
Injected non-combustible gases (45a xxx 45n) retards and controls the combustion rate of the Hydrogen Fracturing Process (100) of Figure (4-8) during gas-ignition.
In essence, then, the Water Fuel Injector system (40) simply processes and converts water into a useful hydrogen fuel on demand at the point of gas ignition ... thereby, co-equally or superseding fossil-fuel safety standards ... especially when ionized ambient air gases (400 xxx 46n) and non-combustible gases (45a xxx 45n) are intermixed with water supply (47) prior to entering Water Fuel Injector Plug (20/30), as illustrated in (40) of Figure (4-2) as to (10) of Figure (4-1).Originally posted by chasson321 View Post
FIG. 3 illustrates an appropriate mechanical configuration adapted to the overall system shown in FIG. 2. An intake manifold (not shown) directs ambient air 101 to air filter assembly 31 operatively interconnected to an inlet valve 32 which is regulated by the management module and controls the flow
of air into air processor 33 which produces a source of ionized non-combustible gases 102, that in turn may be mixed with non-combustible cylinder/engine exhaust gases 103 introduced at exhaust gate 15.
These gases are mixed in the intake manifold 35 with gas from the fuel cell 7, introduced at injector port 19 whereupon the modulated combustion mixture having the hydrogen fuel component in the correct proportion with oxygen is delivered to the cylinder at a burn rate equivalent to that of a fossil or hydrocarbon fuel. An oil inlet port 110 for lubrication is optional. Thus, in the air processor ambient air 101 is ionized and the ionized gas 102, and other modulating gas such as the exhaust gas 103 is mixed until the fuel gas 10 for introduction to the cylinder at the modulated bum rate. Lubricating oil mist is shown at 111
It is obvious that Meyer gives hint of a reaction to produce new kind of fuel gas co-equalling gasoline.Last edited by sucahyo; 04-29-2010, 05:20 AM.
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Sucahyo, you left out this bit from wikipedia::
NITROGEN: one of the strongest bonds
production of ammonia consumes significant energy
Quote:
"Ammonia does not burn readily or sustain combustion, except under narrow fuel-to-air mixtures of 15–25% air. "
I have no problem whatsoever with the idea of using ammonia as a fuel. But the crux of the whole matter is the concept of on-demand ammonia. Why make it at all when you only want it for the hydrogen content??
However you get there, is all you are going to do is ultimately combust the ammonia, by simply making use of it's hydrogen content. A very long-winded and energy sapping way of getting the hydrogen that you had in the very first place from electrolysis!
Why people are struggling to see this problem is a mystery to me.
I have mentioned the implosion myth, but no one seems to care about this. It is a common misconception that appears still to be thriving here.
Irrelevant of what some people think, (and don't take my word for it - wiki it) there is a massive thermal energy release when you ignite H2 in O2. An explosion. The following implosion when the resulting water vapour turns to liquid state does not occur in a combustion chamber of an ICE. Water remains in gaseous state due to the residual heat. Only on the very first few cycles in a cold engine might you get some water vapour condensing on the initially cold cylinder walls.
There is no problem with running and ICE on hydrogen, and there is little to suggest that it damages the engine due to hydrogen embrittlement, because hydrogen embrittlement is mainly an issue with atomic hydrogen. There is also not an issue with it going past the piston rings and damaging the engine. If there were, the old WW2 engines, with there far less precise engine tolerances would have blown up.
The greatest problem may well be the fact that hydrogen is a dry fuel as opposed to petrol, so has no natural lubricating action.
This however is also a factor with LPG (liquid petroleum gas), which we use in our vehicles. The engine stays very clean on hydrogen or LPG, the spark plugs do not get dirty and the engine oil remains clean far longer. But in some cases it can be beneficial to drip feed an additive into the air intake to help lubricate the cylinders.
Farrah
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@Farrah Day
Originally posted by Farrah Day View PostBut the crux of the whole matter is the concept of on-demand ammonia. Why make it at all when you only want it for the hydrogen content??
Why people are struggling to see this problem is a mystery to me.
I have mentioned the implosion myth, but no one seems to care about this. It is a common misconception that appears still to be thriving here.
Irrelevant of what some people think, (and don't take my word for it - wiki it) there is a massive thermal energy release when you ignite H2 in O2. An explosion. The following implosion when the resulting water vapour turns to liquid state does not occur in a combustion chamber of an ICE. Water remains in gaseous state due to the residual heat. Only on the very first few cycles in a cold engine might you get some water vapour condensing on the initially cold cylinder walls.
There is no problem with running and ICE on hydrogen, and there is little to suggest that it damages the engine due to hydrogen embrittlement, because hydrogen embrittlement is mainly an issue with atomic hydrogen. There is also not an issue with it going past the piston rings and damaging the engine. If there were, the old WW2 engines, with there far less precise engine tolerances would have blown up.
The greatest problem may well be the fact that hydrogen is a dry fuel as opposed to petrol, so has no natural lubricating action.
This however is also a factor with LPG (liquid petroleum gas), which we use in our vehicles. The engine stays very clean on hydrogen or LPG, the spark plugs do not get dirty and the engine oil remains clean far longer. But in some cases it can be beneficial to drip feed an additive into the air intake to help lubricate the cylinders.
Farrah
refused to comment on any of them. Claiming it is all unscientific is a
cop out. You should be able to see the reasoning if you're honestly
trying to.
You and a few others are struggling with it because you refuse to
acknowledge the points mentioned in the other thread that I am referencing
here in the first paragraph.
I discussed that hho explodes first before it implodes several times and
most of the times were before you ever posted in this forum. The implosion
is not a myth. The implosion being the only thing that HHO does is a myth.
It explodes, releasing very little energy and then it forms water and
shrinks in volume.
How many hands on tests have you done exploding
HHO after you created it in a commonly ducted cell? Zero? One? or more?
You say electrolysis is your gig but that usually means separating the h
and o at each electrode for real separation. Keeping them together is
a different topic - they are NOT the same and don't give the same
result. This is an indisputable fact.
Igniting H2 and O2 if you're bringing them together separately acts different
than igniting HHO (commonly ducted gases that are never separated out
of the cell and brought back together later.) It sounds like you are
lacking hands on experience with igniting commonly ducted gases from a
water cell as opposed to separating the gases out of a cell and then
bringing them back together in various ratios.
And wikipedia is one of the poorest scientific (or any other) references
the world has ever seen but that is another topic. I sometimes reference
wiki but that is for simple convenience but usually, you need real
references and wiki is NOT a real reference by any stretch of the
imagination.
The implosion doesn't occur in a combustion chamber? Do you have any
idea how fast it "burns" and recombines? HHO is a
burnable water molecule. It is NOT the same as H2 and O2 brought
together. If you think it is, you need to do some experiments.
Besides the embrittlement issue, which to me is a lesser concern, there is
the fact that you simply do NOT want a bunch of water forming from the
combustion. How much experience do you have working on engines,
rebuilding them, racing them, tuning them, etc...? Just curious. I've been
doing it for barely over 20 years for my own personal satisfaction and your
descriptions of everything doesn't indicate to me that you have
the same experience.
There is something used in the ww2 engines that you don't know about.
It was an enhancement to the oil lubrication process and was classified
for many years and was developed originally by and for the oil/gas
refinery industry. And are you saying the ww2 engines were running on
atomic hydrogen?
You're right about one thing, the lubrication necessity from a dry fuel.
"This however is also a factor with LPG (liquid petroleum gas), which we use in our vehicles. The engine stays very clean on hydrogen or LPG, the spark plugs do not get dirty and the engine oil remains clean far longer. But in some cases it can be beneficial to drip feed an additive into the air intake to help lubricate the cylinders. "
Well, my cars run on gasoline, the engine stays very clean, the spark
plugs do NOT get dirty and the engine oil remains clean far longer.
As a matter of FACT, my oil can stay good for 1 year or 10,000 miles
without a change on an engine running on gasoline.
I don't have carbon buildup in my engines, not on my plugs, my oil stays clean
for a very long time. There are possibly many things you have not
considered.
Meyer showed in some concept diagrams adding oil for lubrication in the
manner you suggest. But if you use the right lubrication or enhancement,
you don't need to do what you suggest with any dry fuel and the only
thing better may be getting into ceramics, etc... The high end experiments
with ceramics shows that you can run engine with ZERO oil at all because
it isn't necessary. But of course we won't see these in production and
they would cost as much as a house.Sincerely,
Aaron Murakami
Books & Videos https://emediapress.com
Conference http://energyscienceconference.com
RPX & MWO http://vril.io
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Originally posted by Farrah Day View PostSucahyo, you left out this bit from wikipedia::
NITROGEN: one of the strongest bonds
production of ammonia consumes significant energy
NITROGEN: one of the strongest bonds (226 kcal/mol), not too far from water vapour (219 kcal/mol). If you can dissociate water vapour, you can also dissociate nitrogen.
production of ammonia consumes significant energy, and yet Honda motor claim to made it at exhaust
Originally posted by Farrah Day View PostI have no problem whatsoever with the idea of using ammonia as a fuel. But the crux of the whole matter is the concept of on-demand ammonia. Why make it at all when you only want it for the hydrogen content??
Have you familiar with GEET system? With water as part of its input the GEET output is not hydrogen. It replace up to 80% of fuel with water, 20% with used oil.
Have you ever visit waterfuelforall? There is a thread where a truck have more hydrogen in its exhaust with hydroxy added. Hydrogen is wasted and not burning, waste of energy.
high H2 exhaust emissions
Originally posted by Farrah Day View PostHowever you get there, is all you are going to do is ultimately combust the ammonia, by simply making use of it's hydrogen content. A very long-winded and energy sapping way of getting the hydrogen that you had in the very first place from electrolysis!
Currently my 5mm spark maker require 6watt (400mA@12V) and already produce ozone. multiplying it by 15 should allow a lot of ozone and NOx.
Originally posted by Farrah Day View PostThe following implosion when the resulting water vapour turns to liquid state does not occur in a combustion chamber of an ICE. Water remains in gaseous state due to the residual heat. Only on the very first few cycles in a cold engine might you get some water vapour condensing on the initially cold cylinder walls.
I already post some article mentioning the bad thing of hydrogen. Hydrogen fuel is dangerous. Meyer claim it safe because he convert it something else. Seeing a box on top of exhaust manifold make me suspect that even Daniel Dingel do not use 100% hydrogen too.Last edited by sucahyo; 04-30-2010, 03:04 AM.
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Originally posted by Michael John Nunnerley View Post@Suchayo
You have a good eye for detail, I wonder if we could expand on the box on exhaust pipe thing, nothing on a plate, investigate
Mike
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Originally posted by chasson321 View PostI am talking to Tutanka, not you! You have no idea what I am talking about or why I even ask, but you act as if you can speak for Tutanka. His drawing of the LEDs can be seen here: http://www.energeticforum.com/renewa...html#post82209. So stop trying to speak for him he has his own mind and yours is of no concern to me or anyone else for that matter.
Tim
We all learn from each other, we have to be open minded too.
I answer because I think tutanka will unlikely respond your post.
About LED. To be honest, I find that using a low power LED to strip electron is a stupid idea, it is no where near LASER. LED is not LASER. LED would perform much much worse than LASER. Even h2opower post lab experiment where LASER only able to change electron orbit and may need high power to strip the electron.
Speaking as if LED can replace LASER is misleading. Explaining how the LED work by referring to LASER lab experiment is misleading. Thinking that LED can replace LASER is stupid. Laser has grade, and when referring LASER experiment it is important to know what energy level / energy input is being mentioned. Treating high powered LASER lab experiment as similar with toy LASER is stupid. Treating it as similar to LED is also stupid. Never see a warning no to look straightly to the LED.
Thinking that oxygen will not change its resonance frequency on varying pressure and temperature is stupid. They measure oxygen resonance on very stable consition which may not apply in rapidly changing environment. Without a way to measure gas processor output, no one will know the uselessness of LED on any wavelength.Last edited by sucahyo; 05-06-2010, 02:01 AM.
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