Generating hydrogen through electrolysis of water |
Goodlight, as she calls herself (she's in reality a homeschooling mom and "prodigal musician" from that home of many a content farming twit, the Philippines), was commenting on a then-recent news story that a team of U. S. Navy scientists has succeeded in extracting hydrogen and carbon dioxide from seawater and turning it into a petroleum substitute. Yep, it's real. Unfortunately, Athena managed to conflate this discovery with the infinitesimally slow growth in hydrogen-powered vehicles:
"We’ve been reading, hearing, about cars running on water. From where I come from, we only see petroleum powered vehicles. If there are water powered cars, it is a rarity. "
So, where had you been "reading... about cars running on water," Athena? Are you confused about the difference between hydrogen and water? No, wait: you fell for the bogus claim that a Japanese company has built a fuel cell that converts water into hydrogen and oxygen through electrolysis and then then burns the hydrogen, all in one onboard unit. For one, that's not the same thing as what the Navy invented and for two, it may be possible but a system like that uses more energy than it produces. The Navy could use nuclear power to make jet fuel for planes on carriers – not to run the ship! Anyway, back to Goodlight and her scientific illiteracy... Athena continues her misinformed misinformation by telling her readers that "If you wish to have a car’s engine converted or modified to run on ordinary tap, you will have to do it on your own or find instructions on turning your car into a hydrogen powered hybrid vehicle from online sources. Right having a hybrid car is a luxury to buy and maintain." |
¹ This website is now defunct, and archive.org's Wayback machine never made a copy of the post. Oh, well, no loss...
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SI - RENEWABLE ENERGY
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