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Hi Fellow Citizens With all the Covid raging I have invented an Anti - Covid Hat that fires a beam of negatively charged ions using carbon brushes. This is based on Science after extensive research by me. I can post a picture of the prototype if you want.Tests indicate a steady breeze of negative ions being fired and making any particles sticky and damaging pathogens.It is based on a 7 dollar ion module with 10 heads or 5 pairs of 2 heads.It can be battery powered from a usb power bank if you want to be walk about or a a usb plug.Here are the pictures:-Here is the module.https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/AC-220V-Car-Air-Purifier-Negative-Ion-Ionizer-Anion-Generator-Airborne-Module-UK/383880035591?ssPageName=STRK%3AMEBIDX%3AIT&_trksid=p2057872.m2749.l2649
The clinical decision is whether I'd rather get COVID or have an electric squid set fire to my moustache. Difficult choice.Presumably the system uses the scalp as the reference electrode, so after a few minutes spraying negative ions at the invading virus, you end up with positively charged hair which blows the hat off. Back to the drawing board.
Wouldn't an electrically charged hat attract particles floating in the air ?, like electrostatic-spraying ...//www.youtube.com/watch?v=jPliFIgEWYU
Not at all. Any charged body will attract any uncharged insulator.
i checked and it fires electrons. a -ve breeze is emitted. here is a youtube demonstration
Quote from: championoftruth on 20/01/2021 15:32:01i checked and it fires electrons. a -ve breeze is emitted. here is a youtube demonstrationYour example of the ioniser clearing the cigarette-smoke from the glass, is via attracting smoke particles, not a "breeze" blowing them away.Ionisers attract particles suspended in the air: they become filthy as a result.Ionizers can also generate ozone, which is particularly bad for the lungs.
"The ionisers produce negative air ions that collide with suspended particles and give them a charge. The scientists believe charged particles aggregate together"
researchers found that the infection rate fell to zero during the year long trial.
if the ionisers are cleaning the air in this way, we would expect to find more precipitation of acinetobacter on surfaces and this is exactly what we found.
Quote"The ionisers produce negative air ions that collide with suspended particles and give them a charge. The scientists believe charged particles aggregate together"How very interesting. When I was a lad, particles with the same charge tended to repel each other. Indeed I know of a genius who is going to use that phenomenon to build a space elevator. But 'appen it's different in Yorkshire, tha' knows.Quoteresearchers found that the infection rate fell to zero during the year long trial. But what was it before and after?
Quote from: alancalverd on 20/01/2021 23:48:04Quote"The ionisers produce negative air ions that collide with suspended particles and give them a charge. The scientists believe charged particles aggregate together"How very interesting. When I was a lad, particles with the same charge tended to repel each other. Indeed I know of a genius who is going to use that phenomenon to build a space elevator. But 'appen it's different in Yorkshire, tha' knows.Quoteresearchers found that the infection rate fell to zero during the year long trial. But what was it before and after? A breakthrough in the fight against infections acquired in hospital could be achieved thanks to pioneering new research.The project is investigating the use of ionisers to eradicate airborne infections in hospitals – a technique that could deliver major health benefits and financial savings.Starting in December, the 3-year initiative will be carried out by engineers at the University of Leeds with funding from the Swindon-based Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC).Infections originating in hospital are a serious and widespread problem, affecting around 10% of patients during their stay. There is increasing evidence that up to 20% of these infections are transmitted by an airborne route – at a cost of £100-200 million a year in England alone.The project will build on a recent successful study at St James's University Hospital in Leeds. This found that using ionisers to negatively charge air particles in an intensive care unit prevented all infections caused by the Acinetobacter pathogen. Immune to nearly all currently available antibiotics, Acinetobacter infections are a growing problem in hospitals and can be fatal in some groups of patients.In the new project, the same team will set out to understand the science behind this success and provide a firm basis for future use of the technique. They will focus on the biological and physical processes associated with negative air ionisation and airborne transmission of infection, and establish guidelines for the effective use of ionisers in hospital buildings.Much of the research will be carried out in the University's state-of-the-art aerobiological test facility, which was part funded by EPSRC. The facility incorporates a 32m3 climatic chamber where temperature, humidity and ventilation rate can be varied and controlled. The chamber enables researchers to mimic various clinical environments and perform a wide range of experiments involving aerosols doped with micro-organisms.The project team is being led by Dr Clive Beggs of the University of Leeds' Aerobiological Research Group. Dr Beggs says: "Negative air ionisation could have a dramatic impact on a problem that has been attracting increasing publicity and causingStory Source:Materials provided by Engineering And Physical Science Research Council. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2003/12/031202070209.htmConsidering that these infections kill people and the huge cost to the NHS and the lossf lives it's a dirt cheap way of solving the problem of Covid infection not just in hospitals but in public and private place.I can buy a plug and play ionization for $12
Quote from: championoftruth on 24/01/2021 12:18:02Quote from: alancalverd on 20/01/2021 23:48:04Quote"The ionisers produce negative air ions that collide with suspended particles and give them a charge. The scientists believe charged particles aggregate together"How very interesting. When I was a lad, particles with the same charge tended to repel each other. Indeed I know of a genius who is going to use that phenomenon to build a space elevator. But 'appen it's different in Yorkshire, tha' knows.Quoteresearchers found that the infection rate fell to zero during the year long trial. But what was it before and after? A breakthrough in the fight against infections acquired in hospital could be achieved thanks to pioneering new research.The project is investigating the use of ionisers to eradicate airborne infections in hospitals – a technique that could deliver major health benefits and financial savings.Starting in December, the 3-year initiative will be carried out by engineers at the University of Leeds with funding from the Swindon-based Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC).Infections originating in hospital are a serious and widespread problem, affecting around 10% of patients during their stay. There is increasing evidence that up to 20% of these infections are transmitted by an airborne route – at a cost of £100-200 million a year in England alone.The project will build on a recent successful study at St James's University Hospital in Leeds. This found that using ionisers to negatively charge air particles in an intensive care unit prevented all infections caused by the Acinetobacter pathogen. Immune to nearly all currently available antibiotics, Acinetobacter infections are a growing problem in hospitals and can be fatal in some groups of patients.In the new project, the same team will set out to understand the science behind this success and provide a firm basis for future use of the technique. They will focus on the biological and physical processes associated with negative air ionisation and airborne transmission of infection, and establish guidelines for the effective use of ionisers in hospital buildings.Much of the research will be carried out in the University's state-of-the-art aerobiological test facility, which was part funded by EPSRC. The facility incorporates a 32m3 climatic chamber where temperature, humidity and ventilation rate can be varied and controlled. The chamber enables researchers to mimic various clinical environments and perform a wide range of experiments involving aerosols doped with micro-organisms.The project team is being led by Dr Clive Beggs of the University of Leeds' Aerobiological Research Group. Dr Beggs says: "Negative air ionisation could have a dramatic impact on a problem that has been attracting increasing publicity and causingStory Source:Materials provided by Engineering And Physical Science Research Council. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2003/12/031202070209.htmConsidering that these infections kill people and the huge cost to the NHS and the lossf lives it's a dirt cheap way of solving the problem of Covid infection not just in hospitals but in public and private place.I can buy a plug and play ionization for $12Did you hope that we wouldn't notice that you didn't answer the question?
Quote from: Bored chemist on 24/01/2021 12:32:04Quote from: championoftruth on 24/01/2021 12:18:02Quote from: alancalverd on 20/01/2021 23:48:04Quote"The ionisers produce negative air ions that collide with suspended particles and give them a charge. The scientists believe charged particles aggregate together"How very interesting. When I was a lad, particles with the same charge tended to repel each other. Indeed I know of a genius who is going to use that phenomenon to build a space elevator. But 'appen it's different in Yorkshire, tha' knows.Quoteresearchers found that the infection rate fell to zero during the year long trial. But what was it before and after? A breakthrough in the fight against infections acquired in hospital could be achieved thanks to pioneering new research.The project is investigating the use of ionisers to eradicate airborne infections in hospitals – a technique that could deliver major health benefits and financial savings.Starting in December, the 3-year initiative will be carried out by engineers at the University of Leeds with funding from the Swindon-based Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC).Infections originating in hospital are a serious and widespread problem, affecting around 10% of patients during their stay. There is increasing evidence that up to 20% of these infections are transmitted by an airborne route – at a cost of £100-200 million a year in England alone.The project will build on a recent successful study at St James's University Hospital in Leeds. This found that using ionisers to negatively charge air particles in an intensive care unit prevented all infections caused by the Acinetobacter pathogen. Immune to nearly all currently available antibiotics, Acinetobacter infections are a growing problem in hospitals and can be fatal in some groups of patients.In the new project, the same team will set out to understand the science behind this success and provide a firm basis for future use of the technique. They will focus on the biological and physical processes associated with negative air ionisation and airborne transmission of infection, and establish guidelines for the effective use of ionisers in hospital buildings.Much of the research will be carried out in the University's state-of-the-art aerobiological test facility, which was part funded by EPSRC. The facility incorporates a 32m3 climatic chamber where temperature, humidity and ventilation rate can be varied and controlled. The chamber enables researchers to mimic various clinical environments and perform a wide range of experiments involving aerosols doped with micro-organisms.The project team is being led by Dr Clive Beggs of the University of Leeds' Aerobiological Research Group. Dr Beggs says: "Negative air ionisation could have a dramatic impact on a problem that has been attracting increasing publicity and causingStory Source:Materials provided by Engineering And Physical Science Research Council. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2003/12/031202070209.htmConsidering that these infections kill people and the huge cost to the NHS and the lossf lives it's a dirt cheap way of solving the problem of Covid infection not just in hospitals but in public and private place.I can buy a plug and play ionization for $12Did you hope that we wouldn't notice that you didn't answer the question?The figures are above. i don't have absolute figures. no doubt if you contact Dr Begg he could give you that information or contact the hospitals...