I thought this would be of great interest to all the hydrogen and HHO experimenters
http://revolution-green.com/2013/10/07/first-pictures-hydrogen-bonds-unveiled/ (http://revolution-green.com/2013/10/07/first-pictures-hydrogen-bonds-unveiled/)
Kind Regards
Mark
Great find but I hesitate to agree that this picture is of a flat molecules. Look at the picture again and look for transitions of sharp to fuzzy areas. The out of focus areas are actually further away and hence out of focus. The joining sections or increased contrast areas are due to overlapping structure. That is what I see there...
The lower right is the closest structure then the lower left is next. Then upper left and finally upper right. You can actually see a ghosting on the left hand side of the lower right molecule of the lower left molecule.
My question is this... What in gods green earth is the white lines? How can there be a structure creating those white lines and enclosing the hydrogen molecule..... Hmmm
Also it looks like each molecule is actually a pair of individuals stuck together. Check the upper left molecule right where the two 6 sided hexagon merge. There is a shadow there as well indicating two surfaces joined. So two six sided hexagons pair up to form a molecule then each pair are attracted to a face of another pair. Think of dice here and stack them so they look the same. I doesn't matter if they look correct but just stack them up. It actually looks like they are in a spiral as well.
Let me draw on this picture what i mean...
It seems it won't be long and nano-materials alone may be produced which will split water on contact. Until then, this appears to be a promising step in that direction.
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1369702113000539 (http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1369702113000539)
TS
I agree that nano material will help immensely in the process and might eventually do it passively. I use www.sciencedaily.com to keep up on all the latest news. Great resource...
I added that resource you mentioned to my bookmarks Thanks...