fivebob wrote:If someone can explain how you obtain more energy from burning the Hydrogen & Oxygen than it takes to break the bonds in the first place, then you've got youself a Nobel prize
Given that energy cannot be created or destroyed, the start point is the same as the end point, water, and no process can be more than 100% efficient, where does the energy to run an engine come from?
I'm not denying you can run a car on water, just that you would require more energy input than you would get out, so you may as well just have a electric car to start with. At least that would be more efficient.
Exacly, the first law of thermodynamics says that energy cannot be created or destroyed thus it will take just as much energy to make the hydrogen and O2 as you will get from burning it.
The second law covers the fact that no process can be 100% efficient and thus it will always take more energy to split the H2O in to it's constituants than you will get from combusting them.