Update to complete the reply to my previous post. > Ode Coyote <[email protected]> wrote:
[...] >> I don't know why sulphur would be a problem unless you live down >> wind of a coal power plant or something and leave your distilled >> water, or electrodes open to the air for a long time. >> The black stuff that forms on electrodes is silver oxide, not >> sulphur oxides "tarnish". >> There is no need to do anything but wipe it off and switch >> electrode positions to change the polarity now and then. >>Ode 1. As I described, sulfur is everywhere. if you own a car, you burn gasoline. That releases a great deal of sulfur into the air. If you have a car, you are near a road. Other cars drive on that road,and they release sulfur into the atmosphere. You will experience tarnish on your silver electrodes. It is unavoidable. 2. As I described, you probably find your kitchen sink smells from time to time. This releases sulfur into the air. I recommend to clean it often. 3. If you have a car, you have a lead-acid battery. The acid is sulfuric acid. This releases sulfur into the home. If you place your nose near the battery and sniff - that's what sulfur smells like. 4. Sulfur tarnishes silver readily. It is inescapable and unavoidable. It can severely disrupt the brewing process, and cause a significant reduction in the conductance of the solution in the first 48 hours after the brew. 5. Silver sulfide is yellow, not black. See "http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/StirlingSilverForks.jpg/252px-StirlingSilverForks.jpg" 6. Silver sulfide is not an oxide. I gave the equation in my post: 2Ag + H2S --> Ag2S + H2(g) 7. Reversing the polarity does not eliminate the sulfur. It merely moves it from the cathode to the anode, and leaves some in the solution. This is what disrupts the brewing process and reduces the conductance after the brew is finished. 8. Performing the desulfurizing process I described reduces the conductance loss from 40%to 60% down to less than 12%. 9. Wiping the electrodes has no effect on the tarnish, and does not affect the drop in conductance. 10. Wiping the electrodes is a very bad habit and contributes to further contamination from the tissue and from your fingers. For example, if you look at the electrodes very carefully in the right angle, you will see fragments of the tissue stuck to the electrodes. This contains chemicals from the paper process, that contaminate the dw. So wiping contributes to the loss in silver ion concentration. 11. Since the SilverCell process does not produce any silver hydroxide, there is no need to wipe the electrodes. You no longer suffer the loss in silver ion concentration due to contamination. The myths, misunderstandings and miscomprehension of the silver process have severely diminished the capability of this wonderful metal. I have, by a simple change to the process, increased the silver ion concentration by about a factor of ten, from less than 5% to over 44%. I have shown how to reduce the drop in conductance due to sulfur contamination from 40% to 60% to less than 12%. I have shown how to eliminate the leaching of plain glass containers by changing to borosilicate. These are readily available all over the world, and are called beakers. They are very inexpensive. These are very significant improvements. This is from studying the process carefully, and finding out how it actually works. Then by finding what it needs to improve the entire process, and by continually reviewing the results and improving them again. You can see the results on my forum at http://health.groups.yahoo.com/group/silvercentral/messages These advantages are not available anywhere else on the web. I will post a copy of these discussion to my forum. Thanks, Mike Monett SilveCentral -- The Silver List is a moderated forum for discussing Colloidal Silver. Rules and Instructions: http://www.silverlist.org Unsubscribe: <mailto:[email protected]?subject=unsubscribe> Archives: http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/maillist.html Off-Topic discussions: <mailto:[email protected]> List Owner: Mike Devour <mailto:[email protected]>

