It depends on what it is mixed with. Google search "Water Reactive".Ragnarok wrote: There is no chemical energy available from the water.

It depends on what it is mixed with. Google search "Water Reactive".Ragnarok wrote: There is no chemical energy available from the water.
Now you're just taking me out of context. What I said was there is no chemical energy to be had from water by "unlocking it" with electrical power.Technician1002 wrote:It depends on what it is mixed with.
True but you left out the important part of my quote..Ragnarok wrote:Now you're just taking me out of context. What I said was there is no chemical energy to be had from water by "unlocking it" with electrical power.Technician1002 wrote:It depends on what it is mixed with.
For such a thing to happen is outright impossible, breaking the first law of thermodynamics (or second, depending on how you want to look at it) horribly.
Yes, things can be reacted with water. But water has a enthalpy change of formation of -15.88 MJ/kg, which means it's highly stable, and takes a lot of energy to break apart into it's elements.
It does not react easily, and takes something pretty funky mixed with it to get any notable reaction from it.
And the energy for whatever happens has to come from the funky stuff, because, like I said, water is already a combustion product.
Not always. Water undergoes a number of (mostly reversable) reactions. Heck it spontaneously dissociates to hydroxide and hydronium.Ragnarok wrote: It does not react easily, and takes something pretty funky mixed with it to get any notable reaction from it.
And the energy for whatever happens has to come from the funky stuff, because, like I said, water is already a combustion product.