The hydrogenation process stabilizes liquids into solids cheaply, creating products that are profitable.
i manufacture randomness. lol
Yes, indirectly, but not as a separate element. Hydrogen is used in the Haber process to manufacture ammonia. This is then used directly as a fertilizer or used to create other ammonia based compounds e.g ammonium salts for use as fertilizer.
If 5w30 is the recommended oil and you use 10w30 your engine will suffer excess wear over time. Why in the world would you want to use another weight of oil than what the manufacture recommends? Use exactly what the manufacture and designer of your engine tells you to use and nothing else.
Electrolysis in an enrichment cascade to make heavy water then separate the deuterium from the oxygen. This plant would be powered from some of the electricity made by the fusion reactor. It would effectively manufacture its own fuel. Waste ordinary hydrogen could be liquified for use as fuel in hydrogen fuel cell powered cars.
There are a few different types of vehicles that use hydrogen fuel. You can find cars and other forms of transport that use hydrogen, but the biggest consumer would have to be hydrogen fueled space rockets.
If that is NOT the recommended weight as listed by the manufacture in the owners manual then it would be foolish to use 5w30. Use exactly what the manufacture recommends and nothing else.
Hard vacuum molded plastic with hinged locking lid similar to pelican cases. Thats what I use instead of the case that came with my glasses
We will have to run electric cars, which exist today. There is talk also of cars that run on compressed air. Hydrogen is another fuel source that will run cars if we can manufacture it cheaply enough, and store it safely in the cars.
There are many companies which manufacture high voltage power supplies and the type would depend on what you want to use them for. I would suggest contacting your local electricity company for more information.
Hydrogen is primarily used as a fuel for vehicles, power plants, and industrial processes. It is also used in the production of ammonia for fertilizers and in the manufacturing of chemicals such as methanol and hydrochloric acid. Additionally, hydrogen is being explored as a potential energy storage solution for renewable energy sources.
Not elemental hydrogen, no. That would not work in a fire extinguisher as hydrogen is highly flammable. Some fire extinguishers do use water, however, which is a hydrogen compound.
There are a couple ways you could run a car on hydrogen. First is to just burn the hydrogen, but you would need a LOT of hydrogen to power a car--about 2 cubic feet of it at 3000 psi (which is the pressure in a tank from a welding shop) per each gallon of gasoline you don't want to use. The other is to make an electric car with a hydrogen-powered fuel cell.