Everything that comes in contact with another material tries to become 
electrically neutral, so if one substance has more electrons it will pass them 
on to the other. This electrical flow will cause decomposition at the point of 
contact. It is referred to as dissimilar material corrosion because things like 
rust appear if one or both of the materials is capable of corrosion.

That os why on aircraft for instance, materials are coated with a material like 
zinc to inhibit this from occurring. If not coated one or both of the materials 
would rot thus weakening the airframe because aircraft produce a lot of static 
when airborne due to the passage of air over it.

Alan

On 2014-02-27, at 21:31 PM, Neville wrote:

OK, with a little further research and tapping into the memory cells I finally 
see the bigger picture.  We have electricity and naturally occurring compounds 
in our bodies, so for simplicity sake that pretty much sums it up regarding 
moisture and ion exchange.

Thank You

N.

Date: Thu, 27 Feb 2014 07:55:14 -0500
To: [email protected]
From: [email protected]
Subject: RE: CS>ion-exchange compound?

  Electrolysis and battery effect are all about transporting electrons in a 
liquid where there are no 'free' electrons, unlike what goes on in a wired 
circuit., but with the same result
It's an electro-chemical compounds circuit and all of chemistry can be stated 
in terms of plus and minus electronic potentials.

It can be VERY complicated in detail even if the general idea is sort of like 
carrying baskets of electron sponges around, soaking them up here and squeezing 
them dry there, into a dryer sponge of another color .

Ode

At 09:53 AM 2/27/2014 +1100, you 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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