Info wrote:

> Mike Monett wrote:
>
> > This is not necessarily true, Mike. Silver chloride has a solubility
> > of 0.89 ppm in distilled water. This means a concentration less than
> > this results  in the silver and chlorine ions  going  their separate
> > ways.
>
> 0.89 in pure water, not blood serum which contains 3500 ppm of chloride.

Correct, it is slightly higher with the chloride content, about .9 ppm.

>
>
> Dr. Maass has calculated that the solubility of AgCl in blood serum cannot
> exceed 1.94 x 10-4 ppm.

Then he is wrong. He needs to do some more research.

>
>
> See his calculation here:
>
> http://www.silver-colloids.com/misc/Ionic-response.htm

Calculations of common ion effect are meaningless for silver chloride, since
silver forms chloride complexes above about 1000 ppm of chloride.  You need to
refer him to the references I have already posted and the solubility curves
for silver chloride in HCl and NaCl which I have also posted to this group, so
he can bring his knowledge up to the level of present knowledge and quite
posting information already proven wrong here.

Marshall

>
>
> Frank Key
> Colloidal Science Lab.
> www.colloidalsciencelab.com
>
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