Jones wrote...
Taking Fred's "steam electricity" posting to the next level - can the
self-generated electricity phenomena of steam be used in situ - to any net
energy benefit? or stated another way....
Can two wrongs (near misses)
ever make a right?
Most everyone on this forum is familiar with the RHVT
(Ranque-Hilsch Vortex Tube) and with steam-dissociation (thermolysis or
pyrolysis) which is high temperature steam splitting as a source of
hydrogen, with or without added electrical input.
Both of these are
*inefficient processes,* in one sense. Even when concentrated solar energy
is used as a heat source, thermolysis has never made much of an impact (as
much as scientific logic seems to indicate that it should have). And the
vortex tube is little more than a novelty.
The RHVT is inefficient,
sure, but that is *only* as a cooling device; and thermolysis is inefficient
as a source of hydrogen, primarily because of *recombination* losses prior
to separation of the hydrogen from the steam. These problems may have seemed
insurmountable, but ....
Can these two near misses be combined
synergistically to overcome the weakness of each in a single
device?
The Beck Patent is a step in the right direction - but it does
not go far enough...
Thoughtful insight Jones has, coupled with Fred's ability to keep honest
people honest.
Richard
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