I decided to start this thread in order to get ideas and maybe find the answers why there is foam in many electrolyzer cells.
This tube cell in the picture is powered from an alternator, have wound several alternators and tried different diode configurations and coils. This cell can make the foamy sticky water in all configurations. Adjusted current to 25ampere's.
The more I thought about it I was thinking it was hydroxy not fully split and the oxygen/hydrogen was still wanting to reattach.
So this brings up questions.
Lets say that a water atom gets electrolyzed and splits into its H2 and O but it does not fully convert could a electron in the H2 still be attached to the O?
Or when the water splits into H2 and O can other O's try to attach to themselves?
Maybe I'm not applying enough current?
Looking at the foam and thinking about it why does it just sit in the water and not allow the gases to escape the water bath.
It just sticks around!
I'm sure there are many of you that have had the same happenings and maybe there is an answer lurking about that could help with this problem.
Here's a picture of a cell with 3 tubes per cell totalling 7 triplets or 21 tubes.
The xenon flash lamps were installed later for experimental purposes to test gas strength. Also a pic of what a single set hydroxy output looks like.
When the cell is in front of you the foam appears over whelming and does also recirculate to the bottom of the tubes again.
At this point I'm more interested in the half/split foam and see if it can be released from the water bath.
This tube cell in the picture is powered from an alternator, have wound several alternators and tried different diode configurations and coils. This cell can make the foamy sticky water in all configurations. Adjusted current to 25ampere's.
The more I thought about it I was thinking it was hydroxy not fully split and the oxygen/hydrogen was still wanting to reattach.
So this brings up questions.
Lets say that a water atom gets electrolyzed and splits into its H2 and O but it does not fully convert could a electron in the H2 still be attached to the O?
Or when the water splits into H2 and O can other O's try to attach to themselves?
Maybe I'm not applying enough current?
Looking at the foam and thinking about it why does it just sit in the water and not allow the gases to escape the water bath.
It just sticks around!
I'm sure there are many of you that have had the same happenings and maybe there is an answer lurking about that could help with this problem.
Here's a picture of a cell with 3 tubes per cell totalling 7 triplets or 21 tubes.
The xenon flash lamps were installed later for experimental purposes to test gas strength. Also a pic of what a single set hydroxy output looks like.
When the cell is in front of you the foam appears over whelming and does also recirculate to the bottom of the tubes again.
At this point I'm more interested in the half/split foam and see if it can be released from the water bath.
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