leoinker said:
goldsilverpro said:
separated with either cathodic or anodic membranes
Can you tell us more about these "membranes"? I'm having a hard time visualizing your experiment.
Something like this?
(+) |_|_|_|_|_|_|_| (-)
What materials were used?
Exactly right, but eliminate 2 chambers. The electrodes occupied the 2 end chambers - 6 membranes and 7 chambers. The membranes, widely available commercially, either pass anions only or cations only. They were alternated somehow in this arrangement in a manner to attempt to produce either anion or cation rich solutions in the 5 intermediate chambers. I don't remember exactly how but I could probably figure it out.
If this is a series circuit (which I think, in essence, it is), the amperage in each chamber or cell would be constant and would be the amperage generally applied by the PS (taking the resistance into consideration, of course). The water was split at every membrane membrane surface but, the way I had it set up, 3 of the membranes produced H2. The big question is, did I get an energy advantage, or not?
Maybe, the question of series or parallel doesn't apply in this case. It's just current flowing between the electrodes with 6 membranes in between, each of which creates a voltage drop. Actually, though, this sounds series to me.
The amount of current flow determines the amount of water splitting. If the current is the same, and not divided, at each membrane surface, it seems logical that there would be an advantage.
Over the years, I've posed this problem to a lot of intelligent people and no one has been able to tell me, mathematically, whether or not I got more hydrogen out than what would be predicted by the amount of current going in. I guess the only solution is to set it up and measure the total H2 coming off without contaminating it with the O2 coming off the other membranes.