Harvey,

 


*  It would seem that silver water made from the ellis process distilled, vs 
the control sample distilled it is derived from may turn a rose color instead 
of a golden one when placed under the influence of prolonged sunlight.  If a 
definite difference can be established between the two by this coloration 
tendency, it might lead credence to the ellis expanded water phase angle 
theory. 

Professor Chaplin’s site on water properties is the most authoritative on the 
web, and explains some of the strange phases beyond ice and steam.

http://www.lsbu.ac.uk/water/phase.html

Lately there has been a lot of new data on “2D properties” of materials which 
are surface layers one or two atoms thick, so not truly 2D. 

Graphene is a common subject of study, but it would not surprise me if water 
can form 2D layers on some surfaces. Any colloid like silver can have the 
equivalent of acres of surface area per gram – and it would seem that water 
could form odd phases on these colloidal (metal) surfaces, if exposed to UV 
light and these would have extended lifetimes. 

The high equivalent pressure can happen with moderate energy input in 2D, even 
with a gas and can be stable at higher temperature than expected.

 

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