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    Raising a Stink, With Hydrogen
    Posted on Saturday, July 12, 2003 @ 01:22:03 UTC by vlad

    General Anonymous writes: "While engineers at the world's biggest carmakers are coming closer to developing mass-produced fuel-cell vehicles, one big problem remains. They have yet to develop cheap, reliable sensors that can detect leaks of hydrogen gas, which is extremely explosive."

    From a recent Wired News article by Mark Baard entitled: "Raising a Stink, With Hydrogen" we learn that: "...Two Pennsylvania State University grad students, meanwhile, have developed a breakthrough substance that will give hydrogen, normally an odorless gas, a stench -- the same trick used to warn humans of natural gas leaks..." Read the whole article here: Wired News


     
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    "Raising a Stink, With Hydrogen" | Login/Create an Account | 2 comments | Search Discussion
    The comments are owned by the poster. We aren't responsible for their content.

    No Comments Allowed for Anonymous, please register

    no big deal (Score: 1)
    by chipotle_pickle on Saturday, July 12, 2003 @ 02:28:32 UTC
    (User Info | Send a Message) http://freehydrogen.blogspot.com
    They come built into every Genesis World Energy Edison device. The Edison device can detect a leak anyplace in the house.

    As a safety precaution, if a gas leak develops in a customer's appliance, the Edison Device has the ability to detect the leak and immediately shut the gas supply off until repairs can be performed. As a result, gas supplied by the Edison Device will be safer than using natural gas or propane.

    These detectors will cost less than $5k per house, when bundled with a 8KW perpetual motion machine and inverter. Less than the retail cost of the inverter alone! How can they do it you ask. Two simple things
    1 - Volume. They plan to make million units a day. Before coffee break in their first day of production, they will have built half of the fuel cells on the Earth.
    2 - Overhead. They have none. They don't bother with expensive red tape like business licenses, taxes, offices, factories, UL certification, and all that jazz.



    Re: Raising a Stink, With Hydrogen (Score: 0)
    by Anonymous on Sunday, July 13, 2003 @ 12:13:48 UTC
    A chemical analysis of the reaction shows that hydrogen, although flammable, is not truly explosive because the reaction does not enail what the chemists term "molar expansion" which is the rapid increase in pressure that comes from the molecules reassembling themselves.
    The process is:
    2H2+ O2=>2H20
    where 3 molecular volumes of reactants becomes
    2 molecular volumes of product. The pressure actually decreases, the pop heard when hydrogen ignites is solely from the large amount of heat released causing the water vapor produced to expand. From ElectrodynaCat somewhere in the galaxy.



     

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