Remundo wrote:Sylvestre spiritus wrote:All of this will end up in private messages for the few interested in building a prototype if I cannot express myself calmly; It would be a shame because I think we all have to gain by adopting Remundo's position: "Wait and see!"
Kind regards.
Yes, be nice to Sylvestre, please.
Okay, let's be nice, but back to basics.
If I understood correctly (if it is not the case thank you to rectify by explaining), the process whatever it is proposed by Sylvestre proposes to transform energy contained in water at room temperature (a twenty degrees) in electricity, and if I also understood, without external energy supply.
It is a thermodynamic process, period, whatever the way it works and the physical steps it goes through to reach the final result. There is energy that will be extracted from the water, that returned in electricity, the ratio of the two constituting the gross yield, if there are additional consumptions to pump water, make something spin, produce CO2 or whatever, it will have to be subtracted to arrive at the net yield.
It seems to me therefore legitimate to ask the question of the theoretical maximum yield of this process, which unless to refute the laws of thermodynamics should be quite low.
We can then ask the question of feasibility.
And finally the cost.