Saturday, March 20, 2010

Trapping Discrete Particles in Fluids

Molecular Dynamics looks at the shape, charge, speed, and spin of individual molecules as they move and bump into each other in a fluid such as air, water, fire, etc.

Water contains all atoms at a small particulate level. Since each molecule/particle has a unique shape and responds to specific electrical/magnetic charges, molecules and atoms can be trapped. The patent for the process is called "Trapping Discrete Particles in Fluids".

If you were to imagine a shoe floating down a river, a specific shaped trap could be built that would capture only that particular shoe. A certain size. A certain shape. A certain weight. So the same thing could be done for molecules to trap individual sodium molecules to desalinate as well as water mining for precious metals or cleaning the ocean of large pharmaceutical or herbicide pollution.

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