Yes.
Meanwhile I've re-checked the use of MnO2 in batteries, and it needs also NH4Cl plus some graphite powder to keep the slurry conductive, and at the end the Zn electrode is only a small fraction of the battery's volume.
Which explains why heating compositions just let the hydrogen evolve.
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Any ideas to degrade silicon's resistance to corrosion? It has probably the most benign oxide and I like it for that, but I understand silicon isn't very common in general chemistry.
Two decades ago people managed to make nanoporous silicon which could be oxidized into nanoporous silica, but this was semiconductor technology, not necessarily affordable as a fuel.
Or an other metal whose oxides and hydroxides are harmless in a tea bag?
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Alternately to the tea bag in drinking water, we might perhaps plunge a tube in the water, hot only at the tip, and long enough to keep the reactants and products away from the cup. Say, magnesium powder in a tube of thin electrolytic nickel that makes the anode instead of iron. Or keep some iron in the nickel tube.