Using Water as Fuel in Automobiles

In summary, water is not a fuel, and the energy generated from the chemical reaction of water with air is not additional energy.
  • #1
therimalaya
7
0
What about using water as fuel in Automobiles, recently I've seen in local TV channel of our country, Genepax Co Ltd of Japan built a new car that uses water as fuel. The system produces Hydrogen from water. For more detail, I used this link,

[crackpot link deleted]

Welcome for More discussion in this topic.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Engineering news on Phys.org
  • #2
So many uninformed threads on this...

If water goes in, then what comes out? Water, right? So why don't these brilliant inventors just put the water right back in again? Conservation of mass says all the water that goes in has to come back out again.

So water goes in, miraculously creates energy and violates the principal of conservation of energy (which no one has ever found a way to avoid, by the way) and then this water, having created all this new energy, comes right back out again.

Let's put it back in! Yes, that's the ticket. Stop wasting it. No need. Just recycle it. Better than green. SuperGreen fuel! A car that runs forever by cycling water around in a circle! Charged up by the manufacturer with all the water it will ever need. Never put water into your tank again! :!)

~ reality check ~

Water isn't fuel. If it was, something would happen to it. Like it would disassociate into something and remain in this lower energy state. If these inventors haven't rewritten the physics books, then they must be trying to defraud people. :grumpy:
 
  • #3
Actually water is a fuel. If the humidity is less than 100%, water will evaporate all by itself. Therefore, by converting water to water vapor in a reversible way, you can extract work.
 
  • #4
So would you say that water is a fuel in a steam engine? I mean really, there is an awful lot of evaporation going on there right? Rethink what you are claiming Count.
 
  • #5
Count Iblis said:
Actually water is a fuel. If the humidity is less than 100%, water will evaporate all by itself. Therefore, by converting water to water vapor in a reversible way, you can extract work.

Water is not a fuel.

Any material will change phase given sufficient energy. Alchohol will evaporate. Liquid nitrogen will boil, iron will melt. Per that logic, everything is a fuel.
 
  • #6
You don't need to supply the energy for evaporation. It can be extracted from the environment. If you have a glas of water then without adding any energy, you can extract a lot of work by letting it evaporate reversibly into the atmosphere

Similarly, if you have salt and fresh water, you can extract work by letting the salt dissolve in the water in a reversible way (which involves using filters that let's through only the water or the salt so that osmotic pressure builds up). Note that when salt disolves into water that process actually costs energy.

Suppose you have some stuff in a system that is kept at constant pressure and temperature. It can be coal, or just plain water, water and salt, or whatever. Assume that the system is in (metastable) thermodynamical equilibrium. If the system then changes into some other form and the system is again in thermodynamical equilibrium, then the total amount of work that you can extract from that change is the drop in the Gibbs energy.

So, suppose we start with water and air and no water vapor at 1 bar pressure. This system has a certain Gibbs energy. If the water evaporates a bit until the partial pressure of the water vapor equals the thermal equilibrium value at the temperature the system is kept at, then the Gibbs energy will have reached its minimal value.

So, we can clearly extract work from such a system as long as the relative humidity is not 100%. To do this in practice will involve using filters that only let through air molecules or only let through water molecules.
 
  • #7
We've gotten a rash of these lately, probably due to a combination of the Genepax hoax and wishful thinking due to high oil prices.

Count Iblis, it doesn't matter where the energy comes from. What you are describing is a steam cycle and water isn't the fuel, it is the working fluid. Heck, reread your own first two sentences: you say explicitly that the energy isn't coming from the water.

There are several threads discussing the specific story and the general concept. The short of it is that chemistry dictates that a chemical reaction has the same energy output as you have to input to reverse it. So there is no extra energy available.

Here is a thread, with links to others. I expand in post #50: https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=240283&page=4&highlight=genepax
 

1. How does using water as fuel in automobiles work?

Using water as fuel in automobiles involves a process called electrolysis, where an electric current is passed through water to break it down into its components, hydrogen and oxygen. The hydrogen gas can then be used as a fuel source in the car's engine.

2. Is water-powered cars a new concept?

The idea of using water as fuel in automobiles is not new, but it has not yet been widely adopted due to technological and practical limitations. However, research and developments are ongoing to make this concept more feasible.

3. Are there any environmental benefits to using water as fuel in automobiles?

Yes, using water as fuel in automobiles can potentially have significant environmental benefits. Hydrogen, when burned, only produces water vapor as a byproduct, making it a clean and sustainable alternative to traditional fossil fuels.

4. What are the challenges of using water as fuel in automobiles?

One major challenge is the cost and complexity of the technology required to extract hydrogen from water and store it in a car's fuel tank. Additionally, there is currently a lack of infrastructure for distributing and refueling with hydrogen.

5. Can any car be converted to run on water?

No, not all cars can be converted to run on water. This technology is currently limited to specialized vehicles designed specifically for hydrogen fuel, such as fuel cell cars. Retrofitting a regular combustion engine car to run on hydrogen would require significant modifications and may not be practical or safe.

Similar threads

  • Nuclear Engineering
Replies
16
Views
3K
  • Mechanical Engineering
Replies
6
Views
1K
Replies
5
Views
5K
  • Biology and Medical
Replies
16
Views
1K
  • Materials and Chemical Engineering
2
Replies
63
Views
56K
  • General Engineering
Replies
10
Views
19K
Replies
16
Views
2K
Replies
6
Views
1K
Replies
38
Views
14K
Back
Top