We all know gasoline comes from oil, and we all know that oil is a
non-renewable source of energy. Finding a new fuel source that could power our
vehicles and also be renewable would be a wonderful invention for our planet.
While we have come up with ethanol as a substitute for gasoline, the toxic
emissions that come from burning it are extremely hazardous to our environment.
Electric cars are also an option but they can take a very long time to charge,
and the energy used to charge the batteries has to come from somewhere as well
and that usually means "coal-burning facility". Now there is another
option for the environmentally conscious consumer!
NanoFlowcell has come up
with a way to utilize hydrogen as a fuel source without having highly
pressurized systems in place, since they can be rather dangerous. While there
have been other potential manufacturers of hydrogen-fueled vehicles,
NanoFlowcell seems to be the only one that has made it this close to the
production line.
Genepax, a company based in Osaka, Japan in 2008, developed an energy
generator that split water molecules to produce hydrogen and that was used to
power an engine in a car. A membrane electrode assembly (MEA) was used to split
the hydrogen molecule from the oxygen molecule via a chemical reaction. The
cell only required air and water which removed the need for a hydrogen reformer
or a high-pressure hydrogen tank, which was a safety concern. Genepax went
bankrupt shortly after unveiling their model, even though they had received a
patent on their water energy system.
Stanely Allen Meyer also invented a hydrogen-powered vehicle system
which was patented. His idea implemented the use of "subjecting the
collected gas mixture (extracted hydrogen and oxygen) to a pulsating, polar
electric field whereby electrons of the gas atoms are distended in their
orbital fields by reason of their subjection to electrical polar forces, at a
frequency such that the pulsating electric field includes a resonance with
respect to an electron of the gas atom." Unfortunately, Stanely died in
1998 after a meeting with investors. According to his brother, Stanely said
"they poisoned me," then collapsed to the ground. You can read more
of his patent here.
So what is different with NanoFlowcell's design? For starters, it uses
salt water! They have named their vehicle the Quant E-Sportlimosine and
it has two tanks of liquid with dissolved metallic salts. These dissolved
salts have opposite charges and are then pumped through a membrane. The
chemical reaction of uniting the two molecular structures gives off an energy
that we can harness. This car has just been approved for testing on European
roads, and it's design makes it look like it was made for those curvy
roads. A sleek shape, and statistics that show 0-60mph in 2.8 seconds is an
added bonus for something as beneficial to our planet as emission-free,
non-hazardous transportation.
For more information on the Quant E-Sportlimosine,
you can watch this video, and the following pictures show you what this
beautiful creation looks like.

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