UNDERSTANDING THE ELECTROLYZER USED TO TEST FOR WATER IMPURITIES
Poisoned tap water is one of the main reasons why many people in the same area gets sick at the same time. This is how you can test the water using an electrolyzer and refute the myth of contagion that is promoted by the protagonists of Louis Pasteur's fraudulent Germ theory of medicine who would rather succumb to their cognitive dissonance indoctrination at secular medical schools then to make an effort to get a real health education on the real causes of sicknesses that is been censored.
The instrument consists of an electrolytic rod with positive and negative electrodes (one is an iron rod and the other is an aluminum rod), and two electrodes are used as electric field introduction.
After electrolysis, the positive Fe3+ ions are dissolved under the action of electric current. They will combine with the negative OH-ions in the water to form water-insoluble Fe (OH) 3 particles.
These particles have strong agglomeration and adsorption activity to colloidal particles in water, thereby forming an adsorption and agglomeration process for organic or inorganic substances in water.
At the same time, due to the action of the electric current, the originally dissolved metal particles, such as manganese, potassium, cobalt, etc., are reduced and gradually aggregate to form metal clusters, resulting in the color separation of different metal ions.
After electrolysis, different colors of water show various impurities in the water.
Color identification:
- Yellow: Dissolved acids, silicon compounds, organic minerals, molybdenum, silicon, fluoride and other organic substances.
- Green: arsenic, mercury, lead, copper and sodium.
- Blue: bacteria, viruses, carcinogens, organic phosphorus, etc. (fertilizers, detergents and pesticides)
- Red: iron, rust and bacteria
- White: lead, zinc, mercury, inorganic salt dirt.
- Black: heavy metals (zinc, lead, copper, chromium, manganese, cadmium)
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