Re: CS>Silver-Colloids responds
From: Marshall Dudley
Date: Thu, 24 Mar 2005 08:27:32
http://escribe.com/health/thesilverlist/m78800.html

  [...]

  > That which  reaches the blood stream does not stay  in  ionic form
  > long though.

  > There are  two mechanisms at work that should  quickly  reduce the
  > ionic (dissolved)  silver chloride to silver particles.  The first
  > is the  normal  photographic  process.   In  the  presence  of any
  > developer in the blood, such as caffine or hydrogen  peroxide, the
  > silver chloride  will reduce upon contact  with  silver particles.

  [...]

  Can you  supply  a reference for the reaction  of  converting silver
  chloride to silver using H2O2?

  I just  did a quick test using 36.1uS cs. I poured 1/2  inch  in two
  glasses. Added a few crystals of Windsor pickling salt to  each. Got
  a strong opaque white dispersion in both. Added 1/2 inch of  H2O2 to
  one glass.

  Nothing happened.  There  was no change in color in  the  glass with
  H2O2 added.  Both  solutions turned gray after a  few  hours  due to
  strong light  from a 160 watt overhead flourescent light  fixture 42
  inches way.  A few hours later, both solutions turned  clear  as the
  dispersion settled to the bottom.

  If H2O2  converted  silver chloride to elemental  silver,  the white
  dispersion whould have disappeared. It did not.

Mike Monett


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