To be honest i was just showing you how far behind Arabs are in there thinking
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HHO Mythbusters Explained - YouTube
Video for HHO Mythbusters Explained▶ 4:00
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FkrQojFCUAs8 Sep 2009 - Uploaded by HHOSportTrac
We west are way ahead
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Maybe west is ahead but the ones that doesnt know even the basics of chemistry are waaaaaay backward.
Lol, as far as water powered cars go, anyone who does not know the basics of chemistry just needs to Shut The Fuck Up.
It doesn't matter what desert or jungle they may be in.
Yes i agree that's what i been saying about you with your 8th grade science..
Buildings don't blow up with FIRE
..So shut the fuck up
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And as for the jungle i have every right to call the fillipinos my great gran dad was full fillipino
i have there blood..So shut the fuck up..Killing children poor children
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Plus you moan enough about muslims and have the cheek to say desert or jungle making me out to be a raciest..GO AND TAKE A GOOD LOOK AT YOURSELF..
OH we are the jews everyone picking on us
..CRY ME A FUCKING RIVER
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Same old fucking story..Your just greedy BASTARDS END OF
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Now we know we need to put more energy in so we can get hydrogen gas?..
BUT you can get hydrogen gas without electricity?..
But the point is We westerners thought of the idea way before the ARABS
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The process splits water into hydrogen and oxygen but, while the first part can be done quite efficiently, the latter was more difficult and lots of energy is lost.
With this in mind the team designed a catalyst - a substance that alters the speed of the chemical reaction - to improve the efficiency.
‘Oxygen is the most difficult bit,’ Dr Hintermair explained.
Their catalyst, placed on an electrode used in the production of hydrogen, is much more efficient - and although Dr Hintermair didn’t have an exact figure, he said the energy loss using it is ‘almost non-existent’.
The major benefit from this breakthrough is that hydrogen could now be used more easily as a way to store energy from renewable sources like wind and solar.
‘We can make electricity out of sunlight and wind, low carbon renewable sources, but we can’t store it very well,’ Dr Hintermair continued.
‘We can put it in a battery but you can’t, for example, fly an airplane on a battery yet.
‘So we need to convert it into a chemical fuel, and for that water electrolysis is a key technology because we can take any renewable technology, connect it to an electrolyster and store it in hydrogen, which is a fantastic fuel.’
This, for example, would make hydrogen fuel cells for cars much more economical.
The team are in discussions with a number of energy companies about utilising this technology on a large scale and hope the breakthrough marks the start of contributing to providing the world with more sustainable fuels.
‘In theory it could be used on all systems, but it depends on cost and scale,’ said Dr Hintermair.
As regulations tighten on the use of fossil fuels and their emissions, there is a growing focus on the need for cost effective and efficient ways of creating energy carriers from renewable sources.
Solar power is thought to be able to provide up to four per cent of the UK's electricity by the end of the decade.
However, while the price of photovoltaic technology has dramatically decreased in recent years as demand has risen, solar energy is problematic as it is intermittent, meaning electricity is only created when it is light.
One use of the newly developed catalyst could be to store the energy produced by solar power by using the electricity to produce hydrogen which can then be used on demand, regardless of the time of day.
I AM TELLING YOU ONE DAY WE WILL PUT LESS IN AND GET MORE OUT
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Like i said we make dreams come true
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Buildings blow up with fire
..Now your talking to an expert when it comes to BUILDING
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So it looks like your worse at science than me
..8th grade science
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Must still be in the 8th grade
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