Carbon Graphite Hydrogen

November 8th, 2009 by Discuss this article »
BlueHydroFuel asked:


Hydrogen produced using carbon graphite almost .5 L/min (w/baking soda electrolyte) with less than 30 sq in of surface area. Carbon Graphite produced almost 1/2 L gas per minute with less than 30 square inches of surface area. 150 square inches surface area of stainless made approx the same amount. Problem was the graphite on the positive got consumed and started to deteriorate, but it was not hydrogen and oxygen. It was probably hydrogen and carbon dioxide, or carbon monoxide. This made the …

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2 Responses Add your own

  1. BlueHydroFuel says:

    Carbon graphite can be used to make a burnable gas. The low density has alot of surface area and makes alot of gas in comparison to stainless.

    Water injection is exactly that-water injected into the engine. Search google. One example is actually water suction such as Aquatune. Water can act as an octane to slow the burn and is used in turbos to get more power from the cooling effect and steam engine effect. They do this on turbos to make more hp.

  2. ackleysky says:

    Appreciate video, but is BlueHydroFuel advocating the use of carbon graphite, or not?
    What is meant by water injection?
    Has graphite been compared to carbon graphite?

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