A clue may lie in the way that H2O2 neutralizes chlorinated  water.
Ode

At 10:23 AM 8/27/2004 -0400, you wrote:
>3 or 4 days ago I had mixed up 3 batches of EIS and Salt.  The first I
>added H2O2 to then NaCl, the second NaCl then H2O2 the the third NaCl with
>no H2O2 at all.  After a couple of minutes they all looked alike (which is
>odd, before the one that had H2O2 add first was less turbulent), so I
>figured the end result must have been the same for all 3, AgCl.
>
>Well, I set them aside and just checked them this morning.  The tyndell is
>still strong on the first two, but much weaker (about like the original
>EIS) on the third one.  Putting them under a bright light, the first two
>are turbulent (slightly milky) and unchanged, and the 3rd one is clear, and
>checking the bottoms of the glasses, the AgCl only one has totally
>precipitated out, but the other two are still totally in suspension.
>
>I have no idea what this means!  What could the two with H2O2 in them be if
>not AgCl? If AgCl, why are they still in suspension?
>
>It seems the more we experiment, the more confusing it becomes.
>
>Marshall
>
>
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