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The Water Cooler
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US Navy 'game-changer': converting seawater into fuel
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<blockquote data-quote="Brandi" data-source="post: 2476956" data-attributes="member: 24446"><p>I'm curious how they are getting a fuel that looks and smells almost like the normal fuel from water. I get separating the molecule and using the hydrogen as a fuel but isn't hydrogen both odorless and colorless? How can they be simultaneously separating the CO2 and hydrogen and coming up with a fuel that looks and smells much like the fuel they use now? Obviously the they can't describe the process completely but I just can't see something coming from sea water that looks and smells like any oil based fuel.</p><p></p><p>Hopefully, whatever they have done will aid the research for safe hydrogen fuel for cars. I can imagine the big oil companies have been fighting that research from the start but with the military investing in the process it might force the change.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Brandi, post: 2476956, member: 24446"] I'm curious how they are getting a fuel that looks and smells almost like the normal fuel from water. I get separating the molecule and using the hydrogen as a fuel but isn't hydrogen both odorless and colorless? How can they be simultaneously separating the CO2 and hydrogen and coming up with a fuel that looks and smells much like the fuel they use now? Obviously the they can't describe the process completely but I just can't see something coming from sea water that looks and smells like any oil based fuel. Hopefully, whatever they have done will aid the research for safe hydrogen fuel for cars. I can imagine the big oil companies have been fighting that research from the start but with the military investing in the process it might force the change. [/QUOTE]
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US Navy 'game-changer': converting seawater into fuel
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