We did this at school. I mean talked about it. What you do is you get some cow crap and mix it with water. Put it in a container and mix it. Fix a pipe from the container to your house (somehow) and voila! Rachel, 13
TRY THIS SITE http://www.motherearthnews.com/Do-It-Yourself/1975-05-01/A-Proposed-Sanitation-Methane-Production-System.aspx
Dont even try
Methane gas is a greenhouse gas used in most industries. It is an alkane (compound with CO2 and hydrogen particles).
Methane is another word for natural gas
natural gas is another name for methane
Yes. Methane gas is highly flammable, which is why we burn it as fuel.
Methane is CH4
Ferment it, collect the methane gas it gives off and use that to power a generator.
The principal of a natural gas generator system is to use hydrocarbon gases that occur naturally underground, such as methane, as fuel in a generator to produce energy for electrical devices. One can buy such generators from 'Electric Generators Direct'.
Investigators know that it is possible to capture methane gas from some types of waste. Methane can be burned just like natural gas to heat water and create steam that may be used to spin a generator.
Methane gas is a greenhouse gas used in most industries. It is an alkane (compound with CO2 and hydrogen particles).
Natural gas (mostly methane: CH4) is burned in presence of Oxygen (O2) in a turbine, making it to spin. This turbine impulses an electric generator.
Production of the flammable gas methane is the way that compost bins create electricity. A removal pipe moves lighter-than-air methane gas to a holding tank. A methane gas-fueled internal combustion engine runs a generator that charges an accumulator battery that stores the current to meet the site's electricity needs.
Cow dung is converted to methane gas which is used to generate electricity. See related links below for more.
Methane is obviously a gas and not an alloy.
No. methane is the simplest hydrocarbon and not a noble gas.
Methane is another word for natural gas
natural gas is another name for methane
Does Archaebacteria have methane gas?