Re: RF Helps Dissociate H2 in Sea Water?



On Sep 11, 9:54 pm, John Larkin
<jjlar...@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On Tue, 11 Sep 2007 18:57:09 -0700, MooseFET <kensm...@xxxxxxxxx>
wrote:



On Sep 11, 12:59 pm, John Larkin
<jjlar...@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On Tue, 11 Sep 2007 09:56:44 -0700, EdV <ed_vo...@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
I gotta say if this makes substantially more enrgy than it uses that
is one pretty nifty trick.

link:

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070910/ap_on_sc/burning_seawater;_ylt=An...

Ed V.

"John Kanzius happened upon the discovery accidentally when he tried
to desalinate seawater with a radio-frequency generator he developed
to treat cancer."

Obviously multiply bogus.

Not so obviously about the cancer cure. He is suggesting small bits
of metal be stuck to the cancer cells (the tricky bit) and then RF to
heat the cells with the metal bits. If the fist step can be done,
they may be something to it. Some cancer cells can be chemically
recognized by their surfaces.

But how would microwaves desalinate water?

Apply a billion watts of nearly anything to a teaspoon of salt water
and you'd get atoms flying in all directions this makes it a simple
mechanical sorting problem from there.

You'd blast a tank of water
with RF, and the salt would go... where?

You have to mix in the majic pixy dust for it to work.


And very high power microwave systems have used waveguide water loads,
and water calorimeter-type power meters, for 60 years or more. I don't
recall anyone mentioning hydrogen generation, much less net energy
creation!

They were keeping it a secret because they all work for the oil
companies.

.


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