[NewCandle] bubbling red herrings
Nick Reiter
avalonbiker at yahoo.com
Mon Jan 22 14:39:06 EST 2007
Some more news from the AC electrolysis with aluminum
world...
>From some further experiments Sam Faile did last week,
and some playing around with my little Mason jar rig
in the kitchen, it looks pretty assured that the
on-going bubbling after power removal is an
aluminum-water reaction, jump-started by a period of
electrolytic action (maybe altering the pH?). The
point being that one doesn't need to use red herring
magnesia or calcium hydroxide or any particular
electrolyte. All that is needed apparently is just
enough stray ionic presence to get some conductivity
between the inner twisted foil rod and outer twisted
foil helix electrodes, let it cook with AC for a
couple of hours, and then one continues to get bubbles
(presumably H2) for up to 12 hours afterward.
I think the other novelty of the arrangement really is
the MAJOR infolded surface area of using thin foil
twisted into electrodes of more compact volume.
Probably why it wasn't that noticeable with anode glow
electrodes like Al welding rod or pop can bottoms.
Which of course makes me danger-lust in a thrillkill
way to see what happens if one has a baseline
electrolytic cell going, say with stainless electrodes
in a weak ionic water solution, and then toss in some
finely divided aluminum powder. Maybe it would glow
bright for a few minutes, make oodles of H2 gas, then
settle out as Al2O3 dust. Or it might blow up.
Gawrsh, Bob^115 can't sell me pyrotechnic supplies
anymore. Dang.
N^16
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