Combustion by controled ionisation
20190264907 ยท 2019-08-29
Inventors
Cpc classification
F23C99/001
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F23B2900/00006
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F23B7/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
Abstract
This invention is intended to produce more energy during the combustion of fuels (solid, liquid or gas). This is achieved by separating the electrons and the cations which are produced at the very beginning of the phenomenon of combustion.
This way of making conducts to more violent shocks between the cations (C+++; H+) and the anions (O); thus more energy.
Claims
1: Separation of cations and electrons produced at the first step of combustion to avoid or decrease recombination of them which will conduct to a lower production of energy.
2: The separation of cations and electrons is done by introducing metallic pieces in the combustion area. The hot part of the metallic pieces is near the flames and the cold part is in contact with the entering oxygen. The hot part of the metal is a positive pole which attracts the electrons produced during the first step of combustion. This positive pole also push away the cations (carbon or hydrogen) also produced at the first step of combustion. This is the principle of this separation.
3: Another way to separate cations and electrons is to use an electric field or a magnetic field produced by an electric tension or an electric current.
4: Any practical variant of the principles and/or figures described in this invention. This forms the same unit of invention.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE SEVERAL VIEWS OF THE DRAWING
[0007]
[0008] An aluminum cone wraps the flame. The cone attracts the electrons and push the cations (carbon, hydrogen) to the bottom side away. At the level LC, the electrons are ejected from the cone on the entering oxygen (O). This O-passes through the 20 brick and arrives at the bottom of the flame. Separation is: electrons to the top and cations to the bottom where they collide the entering O.
[0009]
[0010]
[0011]
[0012] The brick which supports the combustion is pierced by holes. Some of the holes are fit with metallic pieces (TM on the drawing). There top sides are near the flames thus hot and positive, thus attracting the electrons produced by the incandescent fuel. These electrons move to the cold bottom side where they are ejected on the entering oxygen.
[0013]
[0014]
[0015]
[0016] A design for liquid fuel with a half cone but the principles are the same. Here, the aluminum wraps the brick and passes below the brick. At the cold side of the aluminum, where you find e and Oon the drawing, the electrons are ejected on the entering oxygen. The hot part of aluminum which is positive, is pulling the cations (C+++, H+) towards the arriving O.
[0017]
[0018]
[0019]
[0020] Here, the metallic part is a bar TM passing through the flames (horizontally) and then, through the brick. At the bottom of the brick, the cold extremity of the bar, ejects the electrons caught near the flames.
[0021]
[0022]
[0023]
[0024]
[0025] A variant for liquid fuels with twin aluminum sheets wrapping the flames. Here, the caught electrons are ejected on the bottom sides of the brick.
[0026]
[0027]
[0028]
[0029]
[0030] This device is for gaseous fuels. The figure represents two tubes; one conducting the gas (G) with the metallic part at its center (TM on the drawing) and the second tube wrapping the first with the oxygen circulating in it. The electrons are caught near the flame and ejected at the entrance of the oxygen (see bottom of the drawing where e is indicated). The two tubes are in not conductive material of the electricity to avoid the loss of electrons.
DRAWINGS
Explanations of the Text in the Figures
[0031] B: brick C: fuel (Carbon/hydrogen) CO2: carbon dioxide e: electron F: flame G: gas H2O: water H: hydrogen L: liquid fuel O: oxygen ion O2: oxygen TM: metal LA, LB, LC (
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0032] At the beginning of the combustion, electrons and cations (carbon; hydrogen) are released from the base fuel. The atoms of oxygen in the surroundings catch the electrons, become anion oxygen thus negative and then are attracted by the cation positive (carbon; hydrogen). The shock gives the energy. The problem is that there could be recombination between the cations and the electrons 25 continuously produced. The effects of these recombination are easy to understand: less shocks and less violent shocks because a shock between a C++ and an O is less violent than a shock between a C++++ and an O. The power depends on the tension between the atoms. High voltage gives high energy during the shock.
[0033] So the idea was to separate the electrons and the cations (carbon; hydrogen) when they are just produced during the first step of the combustion.
[0034] To do that, we can use an electric voltage or a magnetic field.
[0035] For instance, if you put a metallic part near the combustion; this metallic piece is long enough to have one end near the flames (the hot end) and the other end at the entrance of the oxygen (the cold end). Naturally, the electrons from the hot side of the part will move to the cold side, creating a positive pole near the flames and thus attracting the electrons produced by the fuel in combustion. These electrons also move to the cold side of the metallic piece where there are ejected, by tip effect, on the entering oxygen. This oxygen (O2) becomes anion (O) and is injected in the combustion chamber. So the free average route of the O is greater before the shock. There are more shocks because there are less recombination. So energy produced is greater. These are the principles of the invention.
[0036] We can use a voltage or a magnetic field in place of the metallic pieces to have the same effect.
[0037] All the drawings given in this patent are variants of the use of metallic pieces.