johnny comelately wrote: ↑12 Mar 2018, 00:35
Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑11 Mar 2018, 21:25
this is presumably an exothermic reaction
so the air's nitrogen is acting as a fuel ? but (like 'oil') is somehow not subject to the 100 kg limit ?
before then there's the matter of dissociation and reassociation of CO2 to CO and back
and the dissociation and reassociation of water vapour to hydrogen and back
and in the rich mixture of the TJ there's some reduction of liquid fuel to methane
Very interesting point Tommy, this article may be of interest.
In it, somehow one needs to reconcile nitrogen combustion behaviour that is somewhat optimised and the high peak pressures mooted for F1.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5089635/
The posts above made me think.
I went to visit someone today and they were using an 'oxygen concentrator' which is like a small compressor which separates out oxygen and sends it down a tube to breathe.
Is it worth doing on a car? with unlimited amounts being forced in, perhaps not unless the concentration is of use.
If this can be done with Oxygen by such a small machine, what else is in air worth 'injecting' and easily obtained?
The flow of this unit was around 3 ltr/min, so storage would probably be involved
I assume that the ruling of only air would not specify it being separated before being used? (Depending where it was taken from)
Edit the tec said it is about 95% pure.
When arguing with a fool, be sure the other person is not doing the same thing.