If you were to make a wireless shower head, would it have hydrogen molecules and suck in the oxygen from the air to create water? Would you have to recharge it with hydrogen?
It would just have a non-removable refillable dihydrogen monoxide battery like all modern wireless devices.
But didydrogen monoxide is also known as hydroxyl acid, and the major component of acid rain.
I have engineered a solution for exactly this, believe it or not.
The shower system consists of carbon doped ferrous material coated with a zinc passivation agent. There is a flow control subsystem made of a Cu-Zn alloy which also causes aerosolization of the hydrogen-oxygen payload. The hydrogen-oxygen mixture is pre-processed in a large volume nitrogen container, and precipitated down to the shower system using a combination of thermal effects and manipulation of ambient pressure.
Works really well, only limitation is the amount of precipitate available.
In other words, it’s a metal rain bucket with a faucet.
I’ve already got a wireless shower head. It just uses pipes and water.
My wireless shower head does’t use hydrogen, it just uses a hose to supply the water. No wires though.