5. Do we have
visible evidence for these processes?
Yes, by microscopic
observation of water residues.
After 1981, scientific
evidence for the processes described in
question 4 was produced. Since 1985 the
evidence has been published in scientific
and trade journals. (Some of the author's
own publications on the subject include: IEEE
Transactions on Magnetics, Vol. 21,
No.5, September 1985; Room and Zeit (in
German and English): Der Wasserspiegel (in
German); Aqua, August and September 1993;
IBZ (in German).)
Normally, this process
becomes visible to the unaided eye only
after weeks of water use. However, a high--power
microscope detects the starting growth of
hard lime scale within it few hours.
Measured drops of water
are deposited on microscope glass slides,
where they must evaporate undisturbed.
When dry, they are investigated under a
microscope with polarizing light. Because
of their optical properties, the
polarizing light makes the crystals of
calcium carbonate stand out (Figures 3 -
6).
The spots on the slides
occupied by the drops of untreated water
(Figure 3 ) reveal their lime content in
the form of the typical prismatic
crystals of calcium carbonate (''hard
crystals"), mainly along the rim of
the drop.
The spots on the slides
occupied by the drops of water which had
been magnetically treated (Figure 4) are
covered with the circular crystal
platelets, typical seeded crystals.
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Figure
3
Untreated Water
(Magnified 200 times) |
Figure
4
GMX Treated Water
(Magnified 200 times) |
The drops
of water evaporated side by side on the
same glass slide under identical
conditions.
The number of the hard
crystals on the same size water drops are
compared. The reduced number of lime
crystals along the rim of the treated
water drops is used as a direct measure
of the reduction of the hard lime scale
by the treatment.
In this example the
magnetic treatment was about 92%
effective. The untreated water produced
220 hard crystals per 50 microgram drop:
the treated water, less than 18.
Higher magnification of
the evaporated drops reveals that the
calcium carbonate of the treated water
has formed circular, disc-shaped crystals,
which are widely distributed over the
surface of the drop, as compared with the
large prism-shaped crystals grown in the
untreated water on the glass.
These disc shaped
crystals with their specific appearance
in the polarized light are well known in
solid state physics to he "seeded
crystals." This means the crystals
have grown around a "seed" that
became available to the solidifying lime
as a welcome starting center for its
solidification.
| Click to Image to
Enlarge |
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Figure 5
Untreated Water
(Magnified 1100 times) |
Figure 6
GMX Treated Water
(Magnified 1100 times) |
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