A true free energy generator must be able to give energy to itself and to its environment, but it must be able to do it without using electricity. Some methods use a generator based on an electrochemical reaction which is only possible using a liquid electrolyte. Some, such as the ones I suggest, use solid electrolytes which require the creation of a liquid electrolyte and pumping the waste away.
Most of the generators that provide free energy are essentially chemical power plants. Some, such as the ones I suggest, produce waste heat by burning coal. Other techniques try to produce their own energy from the use of fossil fuels. The latter use a reactor in which large numbers of carbon monoxide molecules react to produce steam. This steam is pumped back into the gas to create electricity – the same process as would occur in a hydroelectric power plant.
Free energy generators generate electricity when the waste heat is combined with a gas to produce steam. Free energy generators are very efficient and they can produce a lot of heat. One free energy generator, developed by the University of California, Los Angeles, has an efficiency of about 80 percent.
How much energy does the generator produce?
The actual amount of electricity generated depends on the type of free energy generator being used. The most common type has an efficiency of 25 percent and can produce about 0.8 kilowatt hours (kWh) per kilowatt-hour (kWh/krela). Another method for producing electricity has no waste heat. It uses electricity simply to run the generator. This is called direct-use. The amount of electricity required varies depending on the type of generator being used. For example, a high-efficiency free energy generator can produce about 3,000 kWH with a waste heat heat-generator.
How much energy do free energy generators use?
Free energy generators are based on electrolytes – often called lithium ion. Usually, electrolytes are placed on a surface that is either an electrolyte (such as a solid) or a reservoir (such as a gas or liquid). An electrolyte is a fluid.
Free energy generators generate electricity as a result of the reaction of waste heat in a lithium ion electrolyte with hydrogen in a gas reservoir. As heat is generated, the volume of the reservoir, or the space in the electrolyte, increases. The gas in the reservoir, or the solid electrolytes on the surface of the electrolytes, expand. In this way, gas produced from waste heat