TIG welding electrodes are tungsten. Might be interesting to strike an arc
near a CC of H2O2, with suitable precautions of course, definitally remote
control ("duh, ya think so" says R). AC and DC modes could be different and I
wonder what would happen at microwave freqs? Is there a natural frequency of
Hydrogen?[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > I've been a fan of tungsten for some time; it held up very well in electric > propulsion experiments on arcjets at very high temperatures with a variety of > propellants, including possibly water, if failing memory serves. Definitely > with ammonia and hydrazine. It forms oxides readily that should stay in > place because of its mass and a complex and possibly interlocking structure. > I don't know if anyone has tried it on H2O2. (Sacrifice a light bulb and find > out?--Somewhat thicker wire may be needed.) > > --Best, Gerald > > _______________________________________________ > ERPS-list mailing list > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > http://lists.erps.org/mailman/listinfo/erps-list -- >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>----<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<< ........ Alex Fraser N3DER ......... ......... [EMAIL PROTECTED] ....... [~]_>^</\-[~]_>^</\-[~]_>^</\-[~]_>^< _______________________________________________ ERPS-list mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://lists.erps.org/mailman/listinfo/erps-list
