Aluminum?  How much is absorbed into the skin, and where does it go, and
what does it do?


On Wed, Feb 26, 2014 at 3:53 PM, Neville <[email protected]> wrote:

> Ah, so it is basically nothing more complicated than that really?
>
> It's simply the wound moisture acting as the electrolyte which breaks
> apart those ion clusters {particles} initiating the release of Ag+ ions
> again...Yes/No?
>
> Similar if the product is ingested, only this time the internal body
> fluids or moisture act as the electrolyte which results in the same
>  breaking down of those 'particles' thus releasing the Ag+ ions...Yes/No?
>
> And *that* is what they refer to as the 'compound' part, simply the blood
> or body fluids creating a compound due to the 'electrolytic' aspect as that
> electrolyte interacts and initiates or releases those Ag+ ions from the
> particle structure...Yes/No?
>
> N.
>
>
>
> ------------------------------
> Date: Wed, 26 Feb 2014 06:53:46 -0500
> To: [email protected]
> From: [email protected]
> Subject: Re: CS>ion-exchange compound?
>
>
>
>
>   One ion exchange method [vs compound] is used by bandaids brands silver
> bandaid.
>
> A layer of silver woven fabric, an inert layer of fabric with an aluminum
> woven layer on the other side.
> The body fluids of a wound act as an electrolyte triggering a battery cell
> effect where silver ions head towards the aluminum making a small EIS
> generator.
>
> Silver sulpatimide
>
> Ode
>
>
> At 02:52 PM 2/26/2014 +1100, you wrote:
>
>
>
> Below is an extract which mentions, quote "ion-exchange compounds" end
> quote.
>
>
> What constitutes an 'ion-exchange compound' in relation to *only* Ag+ ions
> dispersed in Distilled Water?  Does simply Ag+ ions dispersed in DW by the
> LVDC electrolysis method constitute a compound in this instance?  Or does
> it refer to something else added to the water?
>
>
> I'm not interested in the 'salts' part, only the 'ion-exchange compound'
> part.
>
>
>  Extract:  "Many types of silver dressings are treated with silver ions
> either in the form of silver salts or silver ion-exchange compounds. For
> these types of treatments, silver release requires moisture or moisture
> plus ions to solubilize and facilitate release of Ag+ ."
>
>
> N.
>
>
>
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