mattr
04-15-2009, 07:49 AM
Im sure you have heard of the scientist who tried to make HHO cells more efficient by pre-fracturing the water before electrolysis.
Instead of using brute-force with electricity to extract the hydrogen molecules, he had ideas to make this process more efficient.
I was thinking... might be a crazy idea but who knows, right? You know how a coin sorting machine works at your bank... big holes let the quarters fall down a tube and smaller holes let the nickels and dimes fall through... walla your coins are sorted by size and counted.
Check out this article...
http://www.nowpublic.com/tech-biz/1989-i-b-m-spelled-xenon-atoms
People... this was in nineteen eighty nine! 1989!!!
If 2 IBM researchers could pull this off back then... what can a super computer do if left to arrange the atoms... HMMM
Isnt it true that hydrogen molecules are MUCH smaller than water molecules? What if that super computer could make a filter on an atomic level that would basically have holes in it just large enough for the hydrogen atoms to pass through but NOT large enough for the water molecules to pass through. Kind of like the coin sorter.
Wouldnt this in fact let the hydrogen through on one side and keep water only on the other side? With NO use of electricity?
Ok all you brainiacs... Is this possible? Feasible?
Thanks!
-Matt
Instead of using brute-force with electricity to extract the hydrogen molecules, he had ideas to make this process more efficient.
I was thinking... might be a crazy idea but who knows, right? You know how a coin sorting machine works at your bank... big holes let the quarters fall down a tube and smaller holes let the nickels and dimes fall through... walla your coins are sorted by size and counted.
Check out this article...
http://www.nowpublic.com/tech-biz/1989-i-b-m-spelled-xenon-atoms
People... this was in nineteen eighty nine! 1989!!!
If 2 IBM researchers could pull this off back then... what can a super computer do if left to arrange the atoms... HMMM
Isnt it true that hydrogen molecules are MUCH smaller than water molecules? What if that super computer could make a filter on an atomic level that would basically have holes in it just large enough for the hydrogen atoms to pass through but NOT large enough for the water molecules to pass through. Kind of like the coin sorter.
Wouldnt this in fact let the hydrogen through on one side and keep water only on the other side? With NO use of electricity?
Ok all you brainiacs... Is this possible? Feasible?
Thanks!
-Matt