Is there an inexpensive or generic form of microhydren?

Tom

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Hi Dennis,

Thanks for that excellent post.

Most people have trouble with the terminology of redox reactions,
it took a constant referring to my notes to embed the
relationship in my mind.

Oxidation is the removal of electrons. Reduction is the gaining
of electrons.
A redox reaction is a two way street (most interactions of matter
involve redox reactions)... that which is oxidised looses an
electron, that which does the oxidising is reduced and gains that
electron. The apparent contradiction in terms comes about because
at the time when these reactions were described the electron was
not known. What was described was the gain and loss of the
positive charge. Hence reduction is the gaining of a negatively
charged electron... and the REDUCTION of positive charge.

The talk of negative redox potential is interesting. Negative
reduction potential (the tendency to donate electrons) sure has a
lot to recommend it. Microhydren, a form of silica hydride in
which hydrogen has an extra electron which it is dying to donate
to oxygen radicals etc. when added to water it outperforms water
electrolysing, so I have been told.

This page has easy to understand information on these topics.
http://www.oralchelation.com/technical/freeradical3.htm

Thanks to Dennis for sparking my interest.
Ivan



----- Original Message -----
From: Dennis Lipter <[email protected]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Tuesday, 17 August 1999 09:45
Subject: Re: CS>Coral Calcium///Redox




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