Goal
Enhance human health and improve combustion efficiency
Problem
Chronic health conditions and inefficient, emissions
Concept Summary
The invention describes a phase of water in which ultra-pure water, when charged with extremely diluted salt ions, forms solid, rigid, nanometer-sized clusters (called double-helix water). These clusters exhibit altered physical properties-lower dielectric constant, higher resistivity, unique fluorescence, and increased emf between electrodes. The clusters are claimed to act as a health-enhancing agent when ingested, inhaled, or applied topically, and as a combustion catalyst (Nano Fuel) that boosts engine performance without raising peak temperature.
Principles
- Formation of solid water clusters via ion-induced electrostatic attraction
- Nanometer-scale particle stability in suspension
- Altered dielectric and electromagnetic properties of clustered water
Scientific Domains
Materials
- Water (H_2O)
- Diluted salt ions (e.g., NaCl)
- Stainless steel electrodes (for measurement)
Mechanisms of Action
- Absorption of nanoclusters into semi-permeable biological membranes
- Catalytic reaction of solid H_2O/O_2 clusters in combustion chambers
- Modulation of electromagnetic fields around the clusters
Applications
- Health supplement (drinking, topical, inhalation)
- Combustion enhancer for engines
Claimed Performance
~=20 % decrease in dielectric constant at MHz, increase in emf between electrodes, fluorescence peak at 298 nm, combustion enhancement without peak-temperature rise, reduction of greenhouse-gas emissions.
Experimental Evidence
Measured dielectric constant reduction, increased emf, fluorescence at 298 nm, AFM/Electron-microscope images of nanometer-sized clusters, thermal-variation UV absorption indicating up to 3 % cluster content.
Replication Status
No independent replication or peer-reviewed confirmation reported in the article.
Limitations
- Lack of independent, peer-reviewed replication
- Mechanistic details remain speculative
- Potential variability in cluster formation
Red Flags
- Health claims without clinical trial data
- Use of terms like 'homeopathy' and 'meridian lines' that lack scientific consensus
- Commercial promotion (Nano Fuel) alongside scientific claims