HHO

 HHO

HHO stands for two parts hydrogen and one part oxygen.

Brown's Gas is the name of a combustible gas that is a special combination of hydrogen and oxygen produced by the separation of the gases from water H2O.

HHO does not refer to water.  HHO generally refers to a simple mixture of hydrogen and oxygen gases after they have been separated from water and stored in separate containers, and then mixed. This mixture is volatile and dangerous.

Brown's Gas intermingles hydrogen and oxygen as the gases come off from water and is a distinct gas that is different from HHO.  Brown's Gas is completely safe and not dangerous.

Brown's Gas is produced by separating water into its constituent components in the process known as electrolysis.

One liter of water generates 1,866 liters of Brown's Gas.

HHO Brown’s Gas

  • Brown’s Gas itself is an intimate mixture of hydrogen and oxygen gases in the stoichiometric ratio of two parts hydrogen gas and one part oxygen gas. 

  •  In addition to the low electrical energy needed to produce Brown’s Gas, the oxygen gas disassociated from water is preserved to further enhance the energy efficiency characteristics of Brown’s Gas when Brown’s Gas is put to use in a vast array of applications. 

  •  Modern Brown’s Gas electrolyzers utilize Pulse Resonance Water Electrolysis Technology (PRWET) that has reduced the electrical energy consumption by 49%, using only3 kWh per CBM (Cubic Meter) of gas produced as opposed to 5.8 kWh using the traditional DC (Direct Current) constant current per CBM of gas produced.




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