Sounds worth a try. What about adding lemon juice or orange juice? Too may other contaminants in those?
It would be convenient to be able to just electrolyze orange juice with silver electrodes, but ... I can't imagine what all you would end up with. I see online that citric acid is used in canning, and is very available and cheap. At Amazon 4 oz is $1.10, and 5 pounds is $26.39. Sounds well worth experimenting with. And if it is used in canning, then it is probably pretty safe to consume too. Just have to figure out a reasonable quantity for a gallon over distilled water. Thanks, Dick ________________________________ From: Marshall Dudley <[email protected]> To: [email protected] Sent: Thu, January 21, 2010 12:40:33 PM Subject: Re: CS>How to make silver citrate Richard Goodwin wrote: > Does anyone know a source of info on how to make silver citrate at home? > > I'm not finding much useful info on the web in general, but what I am finding > is that silver citrate, or silver citrate hydrate, seem to be more potent > than EIS, and still non-toxic. > > Dick If you have a CS maker, then put some citric acid in the distilled water before starting. If not you can use distilled water with some citric acid added, and run a current through it between two silver electrodes. Such things as limiting the current to under 1 mA per square inch of anode, stirring and polarity switching are unnecessary when making citrate. This MIGHT work. Put some silver powder into a solution of H2O2 and citric acid. Have not tried it. Marshall -- The Silver List is a moderated forum for discussing Colloidal Silver. Instructions for unsubscribing are posted at: http://silverlist.org To post, address your message to: [email protected] Address Off-Topic messages to: [email protected] The Silver List and Off Topic List archives are currently down... List maintainer: Mike Devour <[email protected]>

