I have made chemistry a hobby but I'm not very learned. I attempted to find an answer on-line but failed. I don't care if the question is answered out right or if I am send to a resource that will help me find the information on my own, either way, I enjoy learning. That said:
I built an anaerobic digester to produce methane to cook with. My gas collector is two barrels on top of each other, connected by a pipe. The bottom one is filled with water and the top one empty. As the digester produces gas and therefore pressure, it pushes the water from the bottom barrel, into the top barrel, which, in turn, provides the back-pressure to my stove.
With winter approaching, I realized that the water idea is going to freeze. I could put a heater coil around it, but that defeats the purpose of free gas. So here is my Question:
Will methane gas react with liquid ethylene glycol, if I mix antifreeze with the water, or will they remain separate solutions?(the digester also produces a small amount of sulfur dioxide, according to my research, if that affects it.)