This article was sent to me on the related topic of 'magnetic water-splitting' 
(related to NMR in the obvious way).

Magnet doubles hydrogen yield from water splitting
Aligning the spin states of oxygen intermediates overcomes a bottleneck in 
electrolysishttps://cen.acs.org/physical-chemistry/Magnet-doubles-hydrogen-yield-water/97/web/2019/06
There is a case to be made for an entirely new way to split water - using RF 
with strong magnets and potassium NMR. A side effect would be cooling of the 
electrolyte.

"IF" (big if) unusually high hydrogen output from an RF electrolysis cell can 
be demonstrated, then good evidence of what is happening to account for the 
gain - whether it is Millsean/Holmlid or instead is related to nuclear beta 
decay, can be as simple and foolproof as the detection of anomalous argon.
The transmutation test of interest is called "K-Ar dating" and many University 
Geology Labs have the capability. 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/K%E2%80%93Ar_dating
Of course there could be two different causes for gain but the more the merrier.

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