"Don Klipstein" wrote in message
...
In article , John Woodgate wrote:
I read in sci.electronics.design that Don Klipstein
wrote (in ) about 'CB Radios,
Cellphones and Gasoline Vapor Ignition', on Tue, 23 Mar 2004:
That one is up there, but let's check heat of formation...
HF gas: 63.991 KCal/mole, 3.19955 KCal/gram
MgO: 145.76 KCal/mole, 3.644 KCal/gram, but with no gaseous output.
Do you have the figures for CsF?
No I don't. I expect it to be more per mole and less per gram than HF.
I do have a figure for RbF, 133.31 KCal/mole, 1.276 KCal/gram.
But another one that ranks high per gram is Al2O3.
That one gets 389..49 KCal per mole, 3.818 KCal per gram, and 2.45% more
if you get it to be corundum crystal rather than amorphous powder.
B2O3 gets 279.81 KCal per mole, 3.886 KCal per gram.
I think BeO is also up there, probably even more per gram, but I do not
have that figure. I suspect it is the champ in energy per gram of
reactants, and misremembered by one element in the same column since
MgO is not the champ after all.
I suspect the champ is something like a mix of liquid ozone with liquid
acetylene.
Try it and report back.
--
Dirk
The Consensus:-
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