Re: One more time, single particle silver solutions DO NOT exist
Again... where is the proof that they have been measured under .64 nm?
If scientists with a PHD state diffent where is the proof?
I will give you proof:
Francis S. Kelly and George Maass PhD wrote an article: Ions, Atoms and Charged Particles
Silver Atoms
A single silver atom can be considered to be an atomic sized particle of metallic silver. It is the smallest size of silver matter that exists. The diameter of a single silver atom is 0.288 nm. While it is theoretically possible to have a particle of metallic silver that consists of a single atom, in practice particles are much larger and consist of many atoms.
Just for reference, a particle one nanometer in diameter would consist of 31 silver atoms, and a 5 nm diameter particle would be about 3900 atoms while a 20 nm diameter particle would contain about 250,000 silver atoms. The particle size typically observed in
Colloidal Silver has been measured in the range of 5 to 200 nanometers. Such measurements are performed using a Photon Correlation Spectrometer (PCS) that can measure down to 1 nm. In our laboratory a Malvern Zetasizer 3000HS is used to make such measurements
There are all kinds of
Colloidal Silver makers that make claims that they have the smaller particle size, with some "Hick" Laboratories that may do them a favor for "skewed" certificates, but when you have the worlds largest testing facility with the most reputable name backing the products, then I will believe that the particle size can be measured to under .065