The two container version with a copper wire connecting them just puts a cell with a copper anode in series with a cell with a copper cathode. The copper anode should put copper ions into solution (turns blue) while the copper cathode should grow silver particles and crystals, the same way the silver cathode does.

If it works (makes ionic, not colloidal) silver solution in one container and alkaline solution in the other), I also don't know why. I don't have time, right now to experiment, unfortunately.


On 02/17/2015 08:38 AM, Ode Coyote wrote:
## A reverse osmosis filter with electrodes on either side
of the membrane is basically what a "water ionizer" is...
the purpose is to separate a portion of the water into H3+
[Hydronium / Acid Water ] and OH- hydroxyl /"Alkaline Water"
using non reacting electrodes of platinum and DC current.
(snip)
If you use silver electrodes, you get AG+ on one side and
OH- on the other.
The AG+ rich water has no flavor and will react
significantly with hydrogen peroxide.
The OH- rich water [Alkaline Water] is bitter and doesn't
react with H2O2.

  An easy way to do all this is to use 2 containers, one
electrode in each... connected by a loop of copper wire.Â
and keep the voltage down under 12 volts to limit making
colloidal copper in the process.
It shouldn't work.
But it does and I don't know why.

If I checked to see what a meter reads in each, I don't
remember the results.
The last time I did this was about 10 years ago.

Ode

--
Regards,

John Popelish


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