Ode Coyote wrote:

> A If you start with 1 oz of 10 ppm EIS, that will
> >typically have about 9 ppm of silver hydroxide in it.

>
> ##  Might want to check and see how soluable silver hydroxide is. It's
> listed as "insoluable".

I have searched far and wide for information on silver hydroxide, and all I
could ever find was that it tends to become silver oxide over time.  Where
did you find this information?

>
>  Seems like there would be very little if any in the EIS and lots of it
> stuck to an electrode or forming a white spot on the bottom where an ion
> track might be contacting the container under that electrode producing a
> fall-off path. [To coin yet another phrase]
>  Typically such a path [at its worst] would consist of a black spot and a
> white spot, one under each electrode, with a shiny silver plate-out sheet
> between them [nearly impossible to scrub off].

Lets confirm that silver hydroxide is really insolable.  I find some
references that list that silver chloride is insoluble as well, they consider
anything in the low ppm is insoluble.  I can't find anything about silver
hydroxide in any of my chemistry references.

Marshall

>
>
> ode
>
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