Mike Monett wrote: > I don't think so, Frank. The entire field of chemistry would collapse if > this were true. You would not be able to start your car - the battery > would not work. Your car would not have nice shiny chrome bumpers - > electroplating would not work. The simple water electrolysis experiments > shown in grade school would no longer produce oxygen at the anode and > hydrogen at the cathode. It wouldn't matter much. You would not be around > to see it - biological processes would cease to function.
Have it your way. I believe you are completely confused. One spin off of our research into metal colloid production was a device which we called an "Ion To Particle" converter or ITOP for short. Starting with metal cations in solution, a current is passed through the solution converting some of the ions back into to atoms. The individual atoms were then coalesced into particles using Van der Waal's force. This process could convert some or all of the ions into particles whose size was in the 3 to 10 nm range. ITOP is a continuous process that works with all cations (metals). After reviewing the theory of operation and witnessing the operation of the ITOP, Professor George Maass affirmed the theory involved. The fact that ITOP works exactly in accordance with our calculations would tend to confirm that the theory is correct. If our understanding of the mechanism which converts ions to atoms was flawed, the ITOP would not work. Then again, this could all just be accidental, such as the invention of the filament light bulb by Thomas Edison. ITOP development was superceded by research that led to the development of the Mesoprocess which produces sub-nanometer sized particles. frank key -- The silver-list is a moderated forum for discussion of colloidal silver. Instructions for unsubscribing may be found at: http://silverlist.org To post, address your message to: [email protected] Silver-list archive: http://escribe.com/health/thesilverlist/index.html List maintainer: Mike Devour <[email protected]>

