- Sun Jan 24, 2016 12:04 pm
#54474
Les H - hydrogen is very abundant so where is the free hydrogen on earth? - it exists as hydrocarbons and water etc.
Combustion is the thermal runaway state of an exothermic reaction producing products that are ionised (the flame). A chemical reaction requires an energy source to kick it off. Combustion also requires a concentration of fuel and oxidising agent to produce the chain reaction, otherwise the fire goes out. The fuel and oxygen molecules have to be brought close enough together to react, which is why our motors compress fuel/air to some 8.5 times atmospheric pressure.
Substances have a vibrational energy state given by their absolute temperature that is usually great enough to support a chemical reaction. It does not have to burst into flames to perform a chemical reaction, most of the time stuff does not do that.
The battery is vented to allow gases to escape easily, some the O and H will probably combine to water back into the battery but they evolve separately from +&- plates then disperse into the air within and then outside the battery. The molecules have to be close together to react (not burn) so as they're dispersed they don't and why we don't want a concentration build up. Eventually an oxygen might slam into a hydrogen and produce water, the probability of that is quite high as oxygen is is about 20% of air but is an isolated reaction not supporting combustion. The point rather being that hydrogen does not have to burn to produce water with oxygen.
Combustion is the thermal runaway state of an exothermic reaction producing products that are ionised (the flame). A chemical reaction requires an energy source to kick it off. Combustion also requires a concentration of fuel and oxidising agent to produce the chain reaction, otherwise the fire goes out. The fuel and oxygen molecules have to be brought close enough together to react, which is why our motors compress fuel/air to some 8.5 times atmospheric pressure.
Substances have a vibrational energy state given by their absolute temperature that is usually great enough to support a chemical reaction. It does not have to burst into flames to perform a chemical reaction, most of the time stuff does not do that.
The battery is vented to allow gases to escape easily, some the O and H will probably combine to water back into the battery but they evolve separately from +&- plates then disperse into the air within and then outside the battery. The molecules have to be close together to react (not burn) so as they're dispersed they don't and why we don't want a concentration build up. Eventually an oxygen might slam into a hydrogen and produce water, the probability of that is quite high as oxygen is is about 20% of air but is an isolated reaction not supporting combustion. The point rather being that hydrogen does not have to burn to produce water with oxygen.