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Water is the
most abundant fuel source on the planet, so why aren’t we using it?
Because
it’s free and large corporations can't benefit from us, so this technology has
been kept secret since before the Second World War. These large corporations aren’t
going to submit easily, why would they! The only way we can make a difference
and change the world is to support the cause.
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WATER would seem to be relatively easy for
scientists to understand. It is the only natural substance on Earth
that is found as a gas, liquid, and solid. It covers 70 percent of
Earth’s surface, makes up 60 percent of the human body, and constitutes
90 percent of a person’s blood.
However,
the water molecule is far from simple. Given its low molecular weight,
water at ambient conditions should be a gas instead of a liquid. Its
boiling point is nearly 200°C higher than expected compared with
similar-size molecules. And, unlike most substances, when ice melts,
the water molecules pack more closely together than they do when
frozen, which is why ice cubes float. In addition to its familiar
liquid phase, water has at least 3 other liquidlike phases and up to 14
solid phases.
The average electron density around the oxygen
atom in a water molecule is about 10 times that around the hydrogen
atoms. This nonuniform distribution of positive and negative charges
leads to the substance’s unusual behavior.
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HYDROGEN is a great answer to the free energy solution, and I for one want a clean planet for my childrens future. Hydrogen simply is obtailed by splitting a water molecule into hydrogen and oxygen.
Hydrogen and oxygen can be combined in a fuel cell to produce
electrical energy. A fuel cell uses a chemical reaction to provide an
external voltage, as does a battery, but differs from a battery in that
the fuel is continually supplied in the form of hydrogen and oxygen
gas. It can produce electrical energy at a higher efficiency than just
burning the hydrogen to produce heat to drive a generator because it is
not subject to the thermal bottleneck from the second law of thermodynamics.
It's only product is water, so it is pollution-free. All these features
have led to periodic great excitement about its potential, but we are
still in the process of developing that potential as a pollution-free,
efficient energy source (see Kartha and Grimes).
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