I implied that it is not in accordance with practical application.George1 wrote:Actually you claim that the above three are not in accordance with standard mathematics?
You need some energy to generate some hydrogen...
It may be generated fast, it may be generated slow. You may have used high currents or a lower one.
In the end, you have some amount of hydrogen.
That amount just has potential in relation to the lower aquadic state
Separating hydrogen from oxygen is like separating a ball from the ground.
You may do it fast or slow. You may kick it upwards, or tow it upward.
However, in the end that ball has some fixed Gravitational potential in relation to the ground, no matter the method or speed it got up there.
Thus, duration and the exact current you used to generate that amount of hydrogen is of no consequence for the amount of potential it finally has. Perhaps only for the amount of hydrogen that came out of electrolysis, but that's the actual efficiency-factor.
So that's my clarification for why I wrote what I wrote.
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Now for something completely different.
You suggest that you performed an operation according to a pure "mathematical standard"?
Well in that case there's something else to remark.
For some unknown reason you multiply some "efficiency" 'n' with some of the parameters... why?
The standard mathematical way, without knowing that "why", is that the left-side of the equal-sign should receive the same treatment as the right of the equal-side... because.... it's a mathematical equation.
So let's have a mathematical look at the left-side, and simply assume the practical validity of that whole expression.
On the left you divide the voltage by 'n', and the current by 'n'.
Thus "V x I x t" becomes "(V/n) x (I/n) x t"
In effect you divide by n².
On the right side you only do it partially for the factor where you rewrote with Ohm's-law: "I x R x t / n²"
But the added "Z x I x t x (HHV)"-part only gets divided by 'n'. It misses another division by 'n'.
We can cross-out "(I/n)xt" on all factors thus:
- either your 'Z" needs to be divided by 'n' - indicating a lesser production of hydrogen,...
... or your 'HHV' needs to be divided by 'n' - indicating a lesser heating value, ...
... or both 'Z' as 'HHV' needs to be divided by the √n - indicating a lesser value for both.