Hi Asif,

Welcome. 

The anode current should be limited to less than 1 mA per square inch (1 mA per 
645 mm^2 
). For fine results you could go much less than that, but going higher is bound 
to be rough on 
the electrode and to produce 'thingies' in the water. 

Contaminaton of the cell is most likely causing the particles, traces of 
detergent is the usual 
culprit there , as is wiping the electrodes with paper or cloth but anything 
that could float or 
fall in could be the problem. 

There are many variables : temperature, conductivity of the starting water, 
voltage across the 
cell, electrode distance apart, electrode aspect to each other. Nailing down as 
many as 
possible while varying just one will be very helpful while you are learning. 

Increasing temperature speeds up the reaction. Voltage vs Distance apart are 
sort of inverse 
proportion. current is proportional to particle size, sort of. 

Have fun,
OK,
Tony

PS
Archives:
http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]

They are not appearing at the bottom of your emails? Wonder why?

Tony


On 7 Jun 2011 at 0:18, Asif Nathekar wrote about :
Subject : Re: CS>question regarding CS produc

> Is 1.5ma too much..?
> Is that why I got better results when I used 3 anodes?
> Also is the silver width of 1.25mm ok?
> 


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