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Hydrogen Tap ( PLATE-TEST) 353

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Uploaded by on Jul 11, 2008

This video shows a interesting view of Hydrogen coming from the edge of a plate..

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Science & Technology

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Standard YouTube License

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Uploader Comments (johnaarons)

  • Another way to look at it that the hydrogen is gathering or collecting at the edges first.

    I think the disasssociation of hydrogen and ozygen happen somewhere in between. So sometimes if production is very low and there is a large surface area it might take a long time or we might never see bubbles form (ie the hydrogen being lighter than water might come to the surface without forming bubbles is production is low enough). Just a thought...

  • The Hydrogen is coming off the bottom.. first..there is no question .. and the reason is still out there...

    John AArons

  • The water molecule is disassociated at a point between the plates. At this point we have individual atoms too small to see. Oxygen has a slight neg charge so the atoms migrate to the pos plate. Hydrogen has a slight pos charge so migrates to the neg plate. Once enough atoms accumulate on the plate surface, bubbles form. As the bubbles get large enough for bouancy to overcome magnetism they float free of the plate surface. Think semi-permeable. Car cleaning chamois cloth works for me.

  • I will show you another test that will make you rethink that comment..

    John AArons

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  • look forward to it ... but it will take some pretty strong proof to dissprove Faraday on this part of the theory ... but I am getting a real kick out of disproving Faraday these days so will keep an open mind ...

  • I have had them 1/4 " .. the screen is thin..

    John AArons

  • could it possibly be due to the different grades of SS?

  • how close can you put the plates when you put a screen between them? this keeps the bubbles separated well? how about an acrylic plate to separate the plates with a space at the bottom for water flow, if you made a video of this i would greatly appreciate it!

  • "screen"

    Like your back door screen.. It keeps the Hydrogen bubbles away from the Oxygen bubbles.

    John AArons

  • The idea is sound.. but it is a little harder than that... (or not).

    John AArons

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