Hydrogen Generation
There are many different designs using water electrolysis technology to generate hydrogen which is then
introduced as an additive into the fuel stream of combustion engines.
European patent Publication, 30 June 1982. This invention relates to hydrogen generation.
Hydrogen Generator, US Patent 1975. A hydrogen generator constituted by a voltaic cell having
a reactive magnesium electrode and a non-reactive electrode immersed in a salt-water electrolytic bath, a load
being connected between the electrodes to cause a current flow in the cell resulting in an electrochemical
reaction in which the magnesium is decomposed to produce hydrogen and in electrolysis in which the water is
decomposed to produce hydrogen.
Plasmatron Fuel Reformer Development and Internal Combustion Engine Vehicle Applications by L.
Bromberg MIT Plasma Science and Fusion Center Cambridge.
Plasmatron Fuel Reformer Development and Internal Combustion Engine Vehicle Applications by L.
Bromberg, D.R. Cohn1, K. Hadidi, J.B. Heywood and A. Rabinovich, August 31, 2005. Supported by Department of
Energy, Office of Freedom Car and Vehicle Technologies.
Stanley Meyer: Water Fuel Cell - Eye-witness accounts suggest that US inventor Stanley Meyer
has developed an electric cell which will split ordinary tap water into hydrogen and oxygen with far less energy
than that required by a normal electrolytic cell. In a demonstration made before Professor Michael Laughton,
Dean of Engineering at Mary College, London, Admiral Sir Anthony Griffin, a former controller of the British
Navy, and Dr Keith Hindley, a UK research chemist. Meyer's cell, developed at the inventor's home in Grove City,
Ohio, produced far more hydrogen/oxygen mixture than could have been expected by simple electrolysis.

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