Dear ADK

Gasoline is NOT an unstable mixture.  It has been stored for millions of years 
in the ground, just waitin for we Humans to use it up in a century!

(Gasoline plus air is certainly an unstable mixture.) 

Syngas is also unstable. The reaction

  CO + 2H2O ===> CH2 + H2O 

Is the basis of the Fischer-Tropsch process of making gasoline.  An iron or 
cobalt catalyst is necessary.  

Regards to your family and Priyadarshina(?)

Tom Reed


Thomas B Reed 
280 Hardwick Rd
Barre, MA 01005
508 353 7841

> On Mar 7, 2014, at 10:03 AM, Lloyd Helferty <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> ... Gasoline is "an unstable mixture" too ~ just light a match anywhere near 
> it and you will soon find out. ;-)
>  But in this case [where we wish to use it for energy production], "unstable" 
> is a good thing.
> 
> P.S. I assume that your last question about using "coal gas in an internal 
> combustion engine" was rhetorical...
> 
> Regards,
>   Lloyd Helferty, Engineering Technologist
>   Principal, Biochar Consulting (Canada)
>   www.biochar-consulting.ca
>   48 Suncrest Blvd, Thornhill, ON, Canada
>   905-707-8754
>   CELL: 647-886-8754
>      Skype: lloyd.helferty
>   Steering Committee coordinator
>   Canadian Biochar Initiative (CBI)
>   CURRENTS, A working group of Science for Peace
>   http://www.scienceforpeace.ca/currents/
>   President, Co-founder & CBI Liaison, Biochar-Ontario
>   National Office, Canadian Carbon Farming Initiative (CCFI)
>   Organizing team member, 2013 N/A Biochar Symposium:
>     www.carbon-negative.us/symposium
>   Member of the Don Watershed Regeneration Council (DWRC)
>   Manager, Biochar Offsets Group:
>            http://www.linkedin.com/groups?home=&gid=2446475
>    Advisory Committee Member, IBI
>   http://www.linkedin.com/groups?gid=1404717
>   http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=42237506675
>   http://groups.google.com/group/biochar-ontario
>   http://www.meetup.com/biocharontario/
>   http://www.biocharontario.ca
>    www.biochar.ca
> 
> "Producing twice as much food with diminishing resources, without further 
> loss of natural habitats and biodiversity and in a changing climate may be 
> the greatest challenge facing humanity."
>    - Lloyd Helferty
> On 2012-10-24 6:13 AM, Anand Karve wrote:
>>> Tar, a problem when using wood gas in an internal combustion engine, is 
>>> automatically eliminated in the process of making charcoal.Charring does 
>>> not require any input of external energy. Making coal gas from charcoal is 
>>> also relatively simple. I was told that CO + H2 was an unstable mixture, 
>>> but can one use freshly made coal gas in an internal combustion engine?    
>>> Yours
>> A.D.Karve
>> 
>> 
>> -- 
>> ***
>> Dr. A.D. Karve
>> Trustee & Founder President, Appropriate Rural Technology Institute (ARTI)
> 
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