Energy in scuba tank moving a car?

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A filled scuba tank can store approximately 1.2 million joules of energy, enough to potentially stop a 1200 kg car multiple times. The energy release from the tank can be visualized by comparing it to the energy in gasoline, where a teaspoon contains about 1000 KJ. If the air is vented quickly, it could move the car, but venting slowly may not overcome resistance, preventing movement. Calculating the distance a vehicle is pushed depends on the rate of air release, with faster venting resulting in greater movement. Understanding these energy dynamics can help visualize the practical applications of compressed air in moving objects.
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I've watched the videos and read a lot of posts on here about compressed air storage.

I read that a filled scuba tank has over a million joules?

I'm trying to visualize what happens if you suddenly release all the energy from that tank,
it should be enough to move or brake/stop a sizable car?

example I had read was a 1200 kg car going 20 m/s needs 24000 Newtons to stop?

so, a scuba tank has enough energy stored to stop this 1200kg multiple times ?

if that same 1200kg car is at rest, and you wanted to vent the tank to try to move it
if you vent it slow enough, you won't overcome resistance and will empty the tank without
it even moving?

If I vent the tank in an instant how do I calculate how far the vehicle is pushed?

If I vent slower, say 5 or 20 seconds, how do I calculate how that effects the distance a vehicle is pushed.

Thanks for any explanations, I've been reading and not really understanding.
 
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A 12l scuba cylinder at 200bar (3500psi) stores about 1200KJ (0.35KWH) if the air is released to 1atm.
 
Ok, 1200kj or 1.2 million joules. Can you help me with what some real world task might help me

visualize how much that is?

... for example how far it could push a car or other object, etc if expended all at once?

thanks!
 
A teaspoon of gasoline contains about 1000KJ of energy.

A small 100HP engine is 75KW, so a 0.35kwh tank would run it for about 15seconds (assumign 100% efficency)
 
Well, a horsepower is 746 Watts, so a car using 10 horsepower (fairly typical for cruising) is using about 7kW. So the 0.35 kWh in your scuba tank would drive a car for .05 hours, or 3 minutes.
 
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