Done. http://wulfenite.fandm.edu/Data%20/Table_16.html
Hydrogen 0.00016 Grams of gas dissolved in 100 g of water when the total pressure above the solution is 1 atm. > [Original Message] > From: Michel Jullian <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > To: <[email protected]> > Date: 7/19/2006 10:43:11 AM > Subject: [Vo]: Re: BAM > > Jones Beene wrote: (concisely ;-) > > > BTW Michel - the solubility of H2 in H2O is very low: > > See item 33 on this page: > > > > http://www.lsbu.ac.uk/water/explan4.html > > I found nothing of the sort in this item, anyway whatever the exact value is, it could be enough to provoke/catalyze the flashing, the test I suggested would help eliminate this prosaic possibility. > > Michel > > P.S. Kindly answer this someone so Jones gets it. > > > > > Had not Michel asked for short posts, I would have > > given the executive summary of that page ;-) > > > > > > --- John Steck <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > >> That's like asking the sun to dim a little cause > >> it's too bright in the > >> morning... 8^) > > > >> -----Original Message----- > >> From: Michel Jullian > > > >> Jones (please kindly try to make your posts > >> shorter!) I was not thinking of > >> H2 nanobubbles but of _dissoved_ H2 AND O2 (no > >> bubbles at all, not even pico > >> or femto). > > >

