April 23, 2024, 02:17:32 PM
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Topic: Advice wanted about creating silver compounds similar to potassium alum  (Read 2514 times)

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Offline Hoppi

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erm... how could you do this?

I understand that Potassium Alum is potassium and aluminium. It creates a water soluble substance that you can spray onto skin and so-on for an antibacterial effect, and it seems to sit on the skin for a long time.

Could you do a similar thing with silver?

I'm new to this :(

Also, does anyone know how deodorants and things manage to stay on the skin for so long? I'm trying to design a treatment for some stuff, and I'd love to understand this.

Thank you!

Hoppi :)

Offline Arkcon

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Potassium aluminum sulfate is a double salt.  From here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alum More widely, alums are double sulphate salts, with the formula AM(SO4)2ยท12H2O, where A is a monovalent cation such as potassium or ammonium and M is a trivalent metal ion such as aluminium or chromium(III).  So there are 4 possible alums, and silver isn't one of them.
Hey, I'm not judging.  I just like to shoot straight.  I'm a man of science.

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