Posts tagged oxyhydrogen

Common Ducted Oxyhydrogen

Brown’s Gas is common ducted oxyhydrogen; oxyhydrogen produced in a common ducted electrolyzer. From a practical level, what can visually observed, Brown’s Gas is indistinguishable from oxyhydrogen. The only sensory distinction, that can be observed, is the apparent temperature of the Brown’s Gas flame as compared to that of oxyhydrogen. Considering this obvious and duplicable phenomena, common ducted oxyhydrogen reasonably shares the vast majority of properties with oxyhydrogen, but possesses several distinctions.

A Precise Breakdown

Brown’s Gas is common ducted oxyhydrogen.

Therefore Brown’s Gas entails:

1: The production of an oxyhydrogen gas

2: The design of the electrolyzer

The terminology oxyhydrogen refers to a gas alone, and does not entail a production method. Since oxyhydrogen can be produced in an independently ducted electrolyzer, or from botted gases, there are two distinct methods of production. Brown’s Gas is only specified to be produced in a “common ducted” electrolyzer, having only a single production method.