I was getting posts from you yesterday.

Let me say again, that if the mechanism you suggest is really happening, and if 
the HOOH has not been accounted for, then the Kanzius process is more efficient 
than thought.

In fact, it may be as efficient as DC electrolysis.

J.



----- Original Message ----
From: Horace Heffner 

A possibly more accurate description of the Kanzius electrolysis  
process follows.

The dissolved Na and Cl ions are each surrounded by a hydration  
layer, a layer of water molecules polarized radially by the central  
ions.  The alternating RF field causes vibration of the nuclei within  
the ions, but more importantly, mutually 180 degrees out of phase  
vibration of the ions within their hydration layers.  These  
oscillating mechanisms permit kinetic energy storage, energy which  
can ionize the hydration layers upon the occasional close approach of  
the Na and Cl ions, and even permit momentary and partial penetration  
and/or ionization of the hydration layers by the ions.  This  
catalyses the reaction:

2 H2O -> H2 + HOOH

The concentration of NaCl has to be sufficient that enough ions are  
adjacent to each other to support this kind of catalytic action.

Horace Heffner
http://www.mtaonline.net/~hheffner/






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