Mike Monett wrote:

> Re: CS>Silver-Colloids responds
> From: Marshall Dudley
> Date: Fri, 25 Mar 2005 15:04:48
> http://escribe.com/health/thesilverlist/m78873.html
>
>   > Mike Monett wrote:
>   >> 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
>
>   > There are several, here is one:
>
> http://www.freshpatents.com/Silver-halide-photographic-light-sensitive-material-dt20041014ptan20040202974.php
>
>   > [0199] Furthermore,  a development method where the  coated silver
>   > amount of the light-sensitive material is reduced and  a treatment
>   > for amplifying   the   image   (intensification   treatment) using
>   > hydrogen peroxide  is  performed, is  also  preferably  used. More
>   > specifically, an  image   formation   method   using  an activator
>   > solution containing  hydrogen  peroxide is preferred  and  this is
>   > described in JP-A-8-297354 and JP-A-9-152695.
>
>   > Apparently, it  acts more as an enhancement  for  development than
>   > for development. So it would enhance the development  or reduction
>   > process in  the  blood  stream.  Don't  forget  for  reduction the
>   > solution must  be basic, like the blood. You may  try  adding some
>   > sodium hydroxide  to the solution and see if it  will  reduce that
>   > way. But  without  another  developer present it  may  be  slow or
>   > non-existant.
>
>   > Marshall
>
> I agree. Non-existant in your original context. I don't think coffee
> would do it either.

Are you referring to the ability for caffine to cause the reduction of silver 
salts to particles (IE develop
photos).  See http://www.rit.edu/~andpph/text-coffee.html

Marshall

>
>
> Mike Monett
>
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