adding additional gases and igniting these with an electrode,
creating plasma. Let's say we add chlorine. Then hydrogen. Then,
we go up in stages, adding other gases, making the plasma reaction
stronger and the EMF field even stronger, causing the rotating EMF
field in a coil to generate even more electricity.
The advantage here is that you don't have to go to millions of
degrees, but it should remain at a normal level. You do need to
maintain a water reservoir, because if the reactor fails, you're right
that these gases will combine and burn, and also watch out for
dangerous toxic gases... That's important for safety, that this is
considered! So, normally these gases are reagents, but as soon as
they combine as plasma, no chemical reactions occur, but plasma
reactions that discharge more strongly and can therefore generate a
lot of electricity through this method.
A compressor is also required, of course. So, everything remains
more or less the same... So perhaps it could also be done with
Corona discharge, which is applying 10,000V to an electrode...
Because there is induction in the coil, we can also optionally remove
the alternator and transformer and opt for heat transfer, where heat
is dissipated through a heat exchanger and then heats the boiler of a
steam generator. If we are talking about this type of reactor, we
would be better off using tungsten as the coil material.
I think you can suffice here with conductive plasma. Before Corona
discharge occurs, conductive plasma is created, which also has a
magnetic field... So, this phase also works, and an electric ARC or a
Corona discharge is not strictly necessary... You can also put little
energy into it, generating a colder plasma. I'm not sure how cold,
because ultimately multiple gases are mixed... But ultimately, you
can also generate the same effect with little input.