Question:

Break water bonds with sound?(not electrolysis)?

by  |  earlier

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i was wondering what it was called? if you knew of any good links about the subject? what are the frequencies required? could i do it with a sin wave or would a digital wave work better?

i don't want to hear anything about electrolysis im not interested in it already know plenty on it. but if there is another method you know of i am open.

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  1. It can be done with high doses of RF energy, but the frequencies are well above the "sound wave" spectrum. Not sure of the frequencies needed but the power requirement is quite large for  the energy return.


  2. There is a LOT of energy holding the H2O molecules together. Not enough energy in the sound waves to do much. All you can really do is get little bubbles of vacuum from cavitation. You also get an effect where dissolved molecules of gas in the water come out.

    You need over 1eV to disassociate water. This is equivalent to photons in  visible light range, well above the RF range.

    Photosynthesis cleverly uses multiple photons from visible light to cause a single set of reactions. To do it with raw mechanical energy, likely to require far more.

    There are guys doing poorly documented experiments with Ultrasound (42kHz), RF, etc. If you look up the ultrasound guy, Keely was a self educated man in the 1800's who made a living inventing perpetual motion machines. After his death, they found secret high pressure water and compressed air lines through his house supplied by tanks in the basement that ran his "perpetual motion" machines.

    Feel free to google all the related water dissociation nonsense on the Internet; but these approaches violate known laws of physics, so be very sure you can afford to loose any time and money you invest in these schemes!

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