Thursday 17 March 2022

Free natural gas

 

free C0 natura; gas

Companies can easily produce carbon free heat and power.  The use A steam plasma, to burn regular water into heat, light power and X rays.  As we devised at Sheffield University 2001!

1 H₂O+P+PL→2(E²+L+X-ray)

What is actually happening is the plasma burns the naked a hydrogen nuclei, and free electrons into neutrons.

2 H⁺+2e⁻→n⁰

These burn their heavy atomic nuclei into a high June ions and free electrons with two hydrogen which transforms into massive heat light and X rays.

We do the calculations, and a 50x1cm steam plasma are four atmospheres should release a constant 2.4 MW of heat: my chemically engineering contacts have never chosen to do the experiments yet!  Totally carbon neutral heat.  But more make a minute changes every cash cow or of academic scientific researched today, hence their reluctance to work on a carbon neutral power.

So a commercially sourced steam turbine will convert into 1.2 MW of carbon neutral electricity.  We convert into mains AC for convenience!

To drive a vehicle we use a 25 cm steam plasma, linked through the less efficient thermoelectric generator: which has no generous gothic centring effect!

This is facing a thorium salt, which converts heat directly into DC current.  Power Electronics will convert into AC frequency and voltage.

So all companies King get at free electricity!  Warm 0.2 MW is over supply!  So they sell the excess carbon neutral power to the mains, any an annual income of four million UK pounds, for each little thermoelectic plasma power plant.

So cease to burn or oil and gas!  Which only releases 45 kW/m of heat.  Hyper toxic uranium nuclear power only releases to them and 50 kW/m of heat.  And nuclear power uses reinforced concrete to build its power plants, making nuclear power the fourth largest manmade source of carbon dioxide on the planet!

Releasing in two years of plant construction, the commander of carbon dioxide released from conventional power for 25 years!  And after 25 years we demolish the nuclear power plant.  So nuclear power is very much not carbon zero!

For week in use isas almost free electricity to condense carbon dioxide out of the air.  Combine the carbon dioxide with the steam exiting from our power plant, we produce a carbon dioxide steam exchequer over 600° C.

In 1912 the French Sebatier was awarded the noble prize for publishing the and burning, our carbon dioxide and steam.  To form methane and oxygen!


Sabatier reaction

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


Paul Sabatier (1854-1941) winner of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1912 and discoverer of the reaction in 1897

The Sabatier reaction or Sabatier process produces methane and water from a reaction of hydrogen with carbon dioxide at elevated temperatures (optimally 300–400 °C) and pressures (perhaps 3 MPa [1]) in the presence of a nickel catalyst. It was discovered by the French chemists Paul Sabatier and Jean-Baptiste Senderens in 1897. Optionally, ruthenium on alumina (aluminium oxide) makes a more efficient catalyst. It is described by the following exothermic reaction.[2]


{\displaystyle {\ce {CO2{}+4H2->[{} \atop 400\ ^{\circ }{\ce {C}}][{\ce {pressure+catalyst}}]CH4{}+2H2O}}}{\displaystyle {\ce {CO2{}+4H2->[{} \atop 400\ ^{\circ }{\ce {C}}][{\ce {pressure+catalyst}}]CH4{}+2H2O}}} ∆H = −165.0 kJ/mol

There is disagreement on whether the CO2 methanation occurs by first associatively adsorbing an adatom hydrogen and forming oxygen intermediates before hydrogenation or dissociating and forming a carbonyl before being hydrogenated.[3]


{\displaystyle {\ce {{CO}+ 3H2 -> {CH4}+ H2O}}}{\displaystyle {\ce {{CO}+ 3H2 -> {CH4}+ H2O}}} ∆H = −206 kJ/mol

CO methanation is believed to occur through a dissociative mechanism where the carbon oxygen bond is broken before hydrogenation with an associative mechanism only being observed at high H2 concentrations.


Methanation reaction over different carried metal catalysts including Ni,[4] Ru[5] and Rh[6] has been widely investigated for the production of CH4 from syngas and other power to gas initiatives.[3] Nickel is the most widely used catalyst due to its high selectivity and low cost.[2]


To look at the document via a Google search.  It details the unburning of carbon dioxide and steam, to form methane and oxygen.

So sucking the carbon dioxide from the air, combining a little chemical plant, adding a steam and passing of am an LME and helix at over 400° C, to form methane and oxygen.

An almost free source of natural gas!  Oxygen is an expensive gas anyway!  And he is just a byproduct.

We no longer plant natural gas from Russia and through the Ukraine: so the Russian invasion of the Ukraine was illegal under standard UN laws.  He they had been suffering country for your own economic reasons, is plain illegal!

And no company is can make their own natural gas, in a little chemical plant!  And the methane is carbon neutral - formed by sucking carbon dioxide as the air.

We do the electrolysis of regular water as a source of hydrogen gas.  An yet more free oxygen!

And he is from the noble prize from 1912.  Not 1918 as I previously said!  I go it wrong.  I am human!

But the Sebatier reaction was fall he published 110 years ago!  Ander was the subject of a noble prize.

A non fossil source of natural gas!  Totally carbon neutral.  They just circulate the atmospheric carbon dioxide.  We don't add to it!

Plants sink extra carbon dioxide, leaving just a static two parts per million carbon dioxide in the afternoon air.

Somebody tell physics!  Carbon dioxide is limited around the temperate earth to just two PPM, by natural photosynthesis on land or in the seas.

Carbon dioxide rises to four PPM in the arctic winters - where there is no photosynthesis.  Air temperature -50° C.  Game over for manmade global warming and the fictitious/meaningless manmade climate change.

Man is so obviously clears the the natural weather.  Which is controlled by a predictable solar emission cycles.  The natural climate will stop warming again next year!  After 28 years of natural global cooling.

No comments: