Hydrogen cells for marine propulsion.
On Sep 22, 7:39*am, wrote:
On Tue, 22 Sep 2009 06:45:43 -0400, Wayne.B
wrote:
On Tue, 22 Sep 2009 02:50:55 -0700 (PDT), Tim
wrote:
Computers don't violate the laws of physics.
It takes as much energy to get hydrogen out of a compound as you get
when you put it back. It is a chemical battery.
Who said anything about upholding or *defying physics?????
good lord. *I'm saying that eventually hydrogen power will become a
viable (economically as well as ecologically) option in power...
It might become a suitable "portable" fuel like gasoline if production
costs and safety issues could be resolved. * One possible production
solution would be to create hydrogen from sea water using nuclear
power. *Of course if battery technology were better that would be the
way to go instead of creating hydrogen.
The only viable plan I have seen was to use the waste energy from nuke
plants to crack hydrogen out of the cooling water. They were still
working on the exact process but that still assumes we have new nuke
plants set up for that.
If we could actually build nuke plants that made economic sense , a
lot of these problems would be moot anyway.
agreed.
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