Meyer refer to resonant action explaining that is all about movement and deflection of the ions...
I worked this days with many concepts of magnetism and some new exiting experiments that are keeping me from sleep and simply i decided to think about the resonant action stan proposed again..
I was thinking about what if we could simply create a high voltage strong field but instead of pulsing it and its than switched off and reverse the polarity in a ballistic manner to collide the ions and electrons in the bath.
The idea is:
choke connected in series to a dc source a secondary of a transformer and the cell, the primary is wound facing the secondary and this is pulsed in such a manner that the pulse sums to the dc during pulses on an rapid enough completely reverse the polarity of the cell shooting the ions back into the water as the magnetic field collapses ... as the ions cannot go fast enough they get ionized and the electrons should create an avalanche like effect.
So basically you are applying Dc and a Pulsed current at the same time...
The higher is the resistivity of the water the higher is going to be the voltages possible to be used... the higher the back pulse the greater is the ballistic action...
Seems a good theory?
My idea is that the Dc creates an steady electric field but as the choke can resist an ac current the electric field can be efficiently and very rapidly changed in the shape you want it to.
The operational parameters for this must be the voltage the capacitance of the cell, the distance, from this you get the electric field and the number of ions that can be collected at the electrode. Than applying this counter electric field simply accelerate the electrons and or ions back to their original position but as the capacitances involved are really small its clear that it can be a very fast event.
The greater is the resistivity of the water the greater must be the efficiency since you need to spend less amps to attract n ions to the electrode. This allow higher voltage to be applied increasing the products of the reactions.
(http://www.ionizationx.com/index.php?action=dlattach;topic=2855.0;attach=13337;image)