Re: CS>Adding anything to CS is counterproductive

2017-05-08 Thread Mitchel Davis
what about hydrogen-peroxide?

On Mon, May 8, 2017 at 6:13 PM, Phil Morrison 
wrote:

> Malcolm,
>
> An understanding of CS chemistry gets complicated, even for people in the
> business.
>
>
> A firm understanding of silver ions and particles – and their differences,
> is essential.
>
>
> I think you will find the following web site helpful:
>
>
> http://www.silver-colloids.com/Papers/FAQ.html
>
>
> Phil
>
> Scientist
>
> Environmental Research
>


Re: CS>Adding anything to CS is counterproductive

2017-05-08 Thread Malcolm
Phil, I've looked at the paper from SCIENCE you reference, and it would 
seem the preferential reactions you rely on for your conclusions only 
occur at a temp of ~250deg. C.; not good for children and other living 
things, e.g. cooked.  Further, it is monomolecular silver IONS which 
form the majority - ~85% - of silver particles (an ion is a particle 
too, just dissolved in the water solute due to it's electrical valance.  
Perhaps you know of more research in the area that responds to this 
temperature problem and the multi-molecular state of the particles?


As a side issue to the above, one can use silver citrate, silver nitrate 
(as is done in the science experiment you reference), and probably a few 
others which are water-acid soluble and could yield multimolecular 
silver particles, as for example the AgNP's, but the effects of some of 
these (NO3) would be unhealthy to  humans in higher concentrations.


Please comment;  Thanks,  Malcolm

On 5/6/2017 11:22 PM, Phil Morrison wrote:

Hi James,

AgNP stands for silver nanoparticle.

AgNP dissociates oxygen molecules into individual atoms which diffuse
throughout the atomic lattice structure of the silver particle.

The silver particle literally carries atomic oxygen around until it 
meets a

pathogen.  Then, the activated oxygen fries the pathogen on contact.

That's why it's important to keep those AgNP surfaces clean as possible.

The addition of CS enhances the performance of sols, anti-biotics, and
other apps, for sure, but some combinations I've seen hereabouts are
not net positive.

For further study, see below:

https://www.nature.com/articles/ncomms12251











Re: CS>Adding anything to CS is counterproductive

2017-05-08 Thread james-osbourne : holmes II
Hello,

Thank you for the very interesting paper. Filed w/ Colloidal Silver.  I
shall read it soon.

Be well,

James
james-osbourne: holmes II
American State National
AKA: Red Pill Media

On Sun, May 7, 2017 at 12:22 AM, Phil Morrison 
wrote:

> Hi James,
>
> AgNP stands for silver nanoparticle.
>
> AgNP dissociates oxygen molecules into individual atoms which diffuse
> throughout the atomic lattice structure of the silver particle.
>
> The silver particle literally carries atomic oxygen around until it meets
> a
> pathogen.  Then, the activated oxygen fries the pathogen on contact.
>
> That's why it's important to keep those AgNP surfaces clean as possible.
>
> The addition of CS enhances the performance of sols, anti-biotics, and
> other apps, for sure, but some combinations I've seen hereabouts are
> not net positive.
>
> For further study, see below:
>
> https://www.nature.com/articles/ncomms12251
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>


Re: CS>Adding anything to CS is counterproductive.

2017-05-06 Thread james-osbourne : holmes II
Please clarify; Does NP mean "non-particulate"?  What substance or compound
or ionic relationship is "Silver/oxygen".

Assuming you mean oxides of silver, how many of those can exist in a mix of
ionic and particulate silver in water;  theordinary sol such as many of us
make.

Thank you.

James
james-osbourne: holmes II
American State National
AKA: Red Pill Media

On Sat, May 6, 2017 at 6:19 PM, Phil Morrison 
wrote:

>
> Colloidal silver surfaces are very dynamically reactive.
>
> NP Silver/oxygen combine in some 8 different crystalline states, depending
> on the environment.
>
> Adding anything to CS may degrade these surfaces before the body has any
> say in the matter.
>