sub-light tankers trent shipley (26 May 2023 20:03 UTC)
Re: [TML] sub-light tankers David Shaw (26 May 2023 20:28 UTC)
Re: [TML] sub-light tankers trent shipley (26 May 2023 20:59 UTC)
Re: [TML] sub-light tankers David Shaw (26 May 2023 21:29 UTC)
Re: [TML] sub-light tankers Rupert Boleyn (28 May 2023 12:22 UTC)
Re: [TML] sub-light tankers David Shaw (28 May 2023 16:05 UTC)
Re: [TML] sub-light tankers Jim Vassilakos (28 May 2023 18:28 UTC)
Re: [TML] sub-light tankers Rupert Boleyn (28 May 2023 21:02 UTC)
Re: [TML] sub-light tankers David Johnson (26 May 2023 22:45 UTC)
RE: [TML] sub-light tankers ewan@xxxxxx (28 May 2023 22:02 UTC)
Re: [TML] sub-light tankers trent shipley (28 May 2023 23:06 UTC)
RE: [TML] sub-light tankers ewan@xxxxxx (29 May 2023 00:10 UTC)
Re: [TML] sub-light tankers trent shipley (29 May 2023 00:48 UTC)
Re: [TML] sub-light tankers Rupert Boleyn (29 May 2023 00:57 UTC)
Re: [TML] sub-light tankers Greg nokes (29 May 2023 01:01 UTC)
Re: [TML] sub-light tankers trent shipley (29 May 2023 02:00 UTC)
Re: [TML] sub-light tankers Evyn MacDude (29 May 2023 23:28 UTC)

Re: [TML] sub-light tankers Rupert Boleyn 28 May 2023 12:22 UTC


On 27May2023 0929, David Shaw - tihnessa at gmail.com (via tml list) wrote:
> You saying that reminds me - I'm pretty sure I remember someone on the
> list saying once that doing exactly that, using water, actually gave you
> more hydrogen per unit volume than using l-hyd so, if someone can
> confirm my memory, you'd be absolutely right.

A displacement ton holds 1 tonne of liquid hydrogen.

A displacement ton holds 14 tonnes of water. Water is made up of one
oxygen atom (mass ~16) and two hydrogen atoms (mass ~1), so the mass of
a molecule of water is ~18, and of that ~2 is hydrogen, or 1/9th.
Therefore a displacement ton of water contains 14/9 = 1.556 tonnes of
hydrogen.

So water is a more volume efficient way of storing hydrogen than liquid
H2 is. It's very mass inefficient, however.

--
Rupert Boleyn <xxxxxx@gmail.com>