Submitted by FreshT3ch t3_10n6wg5 in explainlikeimfive
[deleted] t1_j67wnz1 wrote
Reply to comment by Kidiri90 in ELI5: why can't we use electricity to kill microorganisms in small amount of water ? by FreshT3ch
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qazarqaz t1_j67wyc5 wrote
Tasty!
Vitztlampaehecatl t1_j680u5c wrote
Moral of the story, don't boil pool water
[deleted] t1_j6815sg wrote
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Chromotron t1_j68255q wrote
Pure water electrolyses if you try hard enough. It's just silly inefficient.
Table salt is normally not used by people doing electrolysis. Other salts such as sodium/potassium hydroxide, or if nothing better is at hand, sodium (bi)carbonate, are safer, similarly cheap, and also do the job better.
zebediah49 t1_j68j9is wrote
> Pure water electrolyses if you try hard enough. It's just silly inefficient.
You have to be trying really really hard though. There's a classic demo where you can make water maintain a bridge between two beakers, by putting a decent few kV across it. You need to use extremely pure water to avoid electrolysis, which is pretty successful.
> > Table salt is normally not used by people doing electrolysis. Other salts such as sodium/potassium hydroxide, or if nothing better is at hand, sodium (bi)carbonate, are safer, similarly cheap, and also do the job better.
Well.. It's actually pretty common, but not for when people want to make hydrogen. The Chloralkali process (i.e. NaCl hydrolysis) is the primary industrial method for producing tens of millions of tons of chlorine and sodium hydroxide.
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