Guest guest Posted January 21, 2002 Report Share Posted January 21, 2002 Jeff, You asked, " How does the whole process [of making ozonated water] work. I know it was discussed before but I did not understand what was being discussed. Thanks. " --------------------------------- Here is a detailed blow-by-blow account of how I am doing it. Perhaps this is more than you wanted to know. I have a Beta Model 60 cold plasma ozone generator located in a 9' x 12' aluminum shed in my backyard. Following Saul's instructions I feed oxygen --- 95% pure --- through 90 feet of skinny oxygen tubing into this cold plasma ozone generator in the shed. The oxygen is produced by an oxygen concentrator located on a shelf in my garage. The flow rate of the oxygen to the ozone generator is controlled at the oxygen concentrator. I set the control on the concentrator for .2 liters per minute flow rate. There is no flow control on the ozone generator. The flow rate is always controlled at the O2 concentrator or at the oxygen tank if you use tank oxygen. Out of the ozone generator in the shed comes a mixture of oxygen and ozone --- the flow rate out of the ozone generator is the same as the flow rate of oxygen into it. At this flow rate of .2 l/m out comes O2/O3 with an ozone concentration of 50 micrograms per liter (50ug/l). This flow rate with this ozone concentration will produce water with a therapeutic level of ozone if done for a sufficient period of time for the amount of water being ozonated. Remember, the cooler the water the better the ozone retention by the water. This gas mixture of O2/O3 flows from the ozone generator through a very thick-walled silicon tubing that is jammed onto a teflon nipple on the generator. The gas mixture goes through the silicon tubing into an open 1-gallon glass jar filled with distilled water. (formerly a 1-gallon dill pickle jar) The oxygen concentrator in the garage and the ozone generator in the shed are separated from each other in order to protect the rubber parts in the oxygen concentrator. On the output end of the thick-walled silicon tubing is a diffuser immersed in the distilled water and at the bottom of the jar. The diffuser causes the O2/O3 to flow out of the end of the silicon tubing in a zillion tiny bubbles instead of a flow of a relatively fewer large bubbles that would otherwise emerge from the open end of the tubing. I do this bubbling of O2/O3 for one hour and the distilled water is then super saturated with ozone. I was told by Saul that if the 1-gallon glass jar of distilled water is ozonated for one hour at 60 degrees F and then immediately capped tightly and refrigerated at 40-50 degrees F, it will keep its super saturation of ozone for 4-5 days. I sometimes store the ozone saturated water in a plastic container made of HDPE plastic, for one day only or briefer periods of time. However, I always ozonate it in a glass jar per instructions from Saul. Saul supplied me with all the accessories to do this job as well as the accessories to do all the other things you do with ozone, except IVs --- but not the pickle jar. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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