Regarding the color of Mesosilver... Somewhere on the site Frank
explains that the dark color of mesosilver is due to the very high
CONCENTRATION of the particles, not the size of the particles.
The following interesting quote is also on their website.
Quote from the silver-colloids (Mesosilver) site:
"Regarding the dark color of high particle surface area colloids"
Question: Dr. Ronald Gibbs booklet states that high-quality Colloidal
Silver is colorless, but the highest particle surface area colloid in
the tabulations is dark in color, why this discrepancy?
Answer: The material in Ron Gibbs book is slightly dated. Ron died in
May 2000 and the book material was frozen about a year before. For
example, the samples that Ron tested, some of which were made for him
in the Colloidal Science Lab. Inc.(CSL) were believed by Ron to be at
least 50% colloidal when in fact they were mostly ionic (typically
90%). The methods developed at CSL to determine ionic vs. particle
concentration were just being developed at the time Ron wrote the
book and so he was not fully informed about the ion/particle ratio of
the test samples and consequently made some erroneous assumptions.
Ron assumed the sample were at least 50% particles when they were
only 10%.
(So in fact Ron Gibbs was proving that IONIC silver works)
David (Australia.)
From: Janet Bergen <[email protected]>
Date: 2 February 2012 10:39:43 AM
To: <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: CS>Mesosilver
Sally,
I've bought MesoSilver for the past 6 or so years- and it works,
and people are catching on.
But I want to take it the next step now. I've noticed the color is
an issue to me. The longer the MesoSilver stays stored the more
likely the color changes from yellow to a green or darker color.
From what I've read the suspended Ag particles are dropping out of
the suspension thereby causing discoloration from the non-
uniformity. I believe the ideal color is supposed to be clear.
I will be making my own soon using a Silver Generator (just a
constant current source w/ silver electrodes placed into the water)
and a conductivity meter to first test (to make sure the water is
as pure & distilled as possible) and for determining afterward, to
some degree, the colloidal effect that I produced. Then using a low-
powered laser determine the ppm level.
this is really interesting stuff, and you'll be fine with MesoSilver,
kevin
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