Re: Vortex tubes - -50 degree cooling?

Kenneth Carrigan ( (no email) )
Wed, 4 Feb 1998 12:29:35 -0500

Jer et all,
Response to bond angles....

http://www.vru.com/ozone/water.html
Evaporated water has bond angle of 120 degrees but on
condensing returns to 101 degrees.
Ozonated water has highest bond angle - 109.5 degrees.
Dead water is 101 degrees.

http://alf.chem.su.oz.au/~haymet/2pt/2pt97lectures.html
under 'shape of molecular water' - not the Schrödinger wave
equation... (-:

This is what microwave ovens do to water molecules... adds
energy and expands the bond angles. Wouldn't it be neat if
we could make an energy extraction unit - similar to the uWave
oven only it would make food/water cooler to the point of ice
cubes or even colder... (-:

<<snip>>
>So, I found a comment years ago saying that the bonding angle of the
>hydrogen to oxygen in the water molecule varied with temperature. I've
>been looking for the hard science data on this, but never found it (yet).
>
>As I understood it, water at room temperature had a bonding angle of
>about 120 degrees....when it is frozen, the bonding angle was 118
>degrees, and when in steam form, the bonding angle was 122 degrees...
>
>If this is so and has been measured (I don't see how they'd measure
>steam), then if we could instantly or even gradually alter the bonding
>angle using phase conjugates, we could produce controlled heating and
>cooling of water....this means a personal body climate control system...
>
>Since the body is 98% water, we simply produce a biasing field to control
>the bonding angle for a given temperature....I know, it sounds very spacy
>and thats why I am not comfortable with it at this point because I can't
>find the bonding angles and their associated matter phase state (ice,
>water, steam)....
>
>Does anyone know where to find this bonding angle or have any thoughts on
>this? It would make a helluva product if we could determine
>it...imagine, a NUDE world...<g>.....
>--
> Jerry W. Decker / jdecker@keelynet.com
> http://keelynet.com / "From an Art to a Science"
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