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How The Atom Buster Works
Most fuels for internal combustion engines are liquid which does not combust until vaporized and mixed with air. Installing the atom buster and applying a magnetic field to ionizing fuel , ensures more complete combustion improving the engine's fuel efficiency and power.
Fuel mainly consists of hydrocarbons. Groupings of hydrocarbons, when flowing through a magnetic field, change their orientations of magnetization in a direction opposite to that of the magnetic field. The molecules of hydrocarbon change their configuration. At the same time intermolecular force is considerably reduced or depressed. This causes dispersed oil particles to become finely divided. In addition, hydrogen ions in fuel and oxygen ions in air are magnetized to form magnetic domains atomizing fuel into finer particles.
Generally a liquid or gas fuel used for an internal combustion engine is composed of a set of molecules. Each molecule includes a number of atoms, which is composed of a nucleus and electrons orbiting around their nucleus. The molecules have magnetic moments in themselves, and the rotating electrons cause magnetic phenomena. Thus, positive (+) and negative (-) electric charges exists in the fuel's molecules. For this reason, the fuel particles of the negative and positive electric charges are not split into more minute particles. Accordingly, the fuels are not actively interlocked with oxygen during combustion, thereby causing incomplete combustion.
Installing the Atom buster on a fuel line splits the fuel clusters into finer particles using magnetic force as illustrated in the following animation.
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