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Structured Water

Inventor: Radik Bogdanov
Device: Honeycomb ball
Folder: BogdanovStructuredWater
Original: Open article
Confidence
0.30
Practicability
0.20
Evidence
0.40
Fringe Score
0.90
Risk
0.50
TRL
2

Goal

To structure water and saline solutions in order to improve health, increase energy, and remove contaminants.

Problem

Health problems, diseases such as cancer and Ebola, and the presence of heavy metals and poor water quality.

Concept Summary

A large honeycomb-shaped glass/crystal ball (6-12 m diameter) is used to "charge" water or saline by placing the liquid inside the ball for a few seconds. The inventor claims the ball restructures the water at the molecular level, removes heavy metals, changes pH, and imparts health-beneficial energy.

Principles

  • Crystal field induced structuring of water
  • Energy concentration within a honeycomb glass cavity
  • Harmonization of space to affect molecular arrangement

Scientific Domains

Chemistry Materials Science Physics

Materials

  • glass
  • quartz
  • emerald
  • sapphire
  • ruby

Mechanisms of Action

  • Alters water molecular structure to a mesh-like crystalline form
  • Removes dissolved heavy metals and other contaminants
  • Modifies pH and optical properties of the liquid

Energy Sources

ambient energy (claimed to be concentrated by the crystal ball)

Applications

  • Therapeutic water consumption
  • Intravenous saline treatment
  • Water purification

Claimed Performance

Heavy metals disappear, pH changes, water becomes transparent and soft, and users experience health improvements such as cancer recovery and increased vitality.

Experimental Evidence

A test report (No. 18-LP-OZ, 7 Aug 2003) from the Test Center of the Research Institute of the KVO of Moscow showed a decrease in dry residue from 196 mg/L to 127 mg/L and disappearance of thrones, copper, cobalt, zinc, and aluminum after processing water in the ball. The inventor also cites chemical analyses showing pH shift and color improvement.

Replication Status

Laboratories including the Research Institute of Moscow and Sterlitamak reported similar structural changes in water after exposure to the ball.

Limitations

  • No peer-reviewed publications
  • Device size (several meters) impractical for everyday use
  • Health claims lack clinical validation

Red Flags

  • Extraordinary health claims (cancer, Ebola) without clinical evidence
  • Reliance on anecdotal reports and non-scientific videos
  • Potential for financial exploitation

Keywords

structured water honeycomb ball crystal therapy health heavy metals pH

Related Technologies

Water ionizers Crystal healing devices Electrolytic water treatment

📷 Images

Bogdanov.jpg
Bogdanov.jpg