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WHAT IS THE ACTIVE INGREDIENT IN THE ACTIVATED STABILIZED OXYGEN IF IT IS NOT SODIUM CHLORITE OR SOME OTHER OXYCHLORINE COMPOUND?

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WHAT IS THE ACTIVE INGREDIENT IN THE ACTIVATED STABILIZED OXYGEN IF IT IS NOT SODIUM CHLORITE OR SOME OTHER OXYCHLORINE COMPOUND?

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First let’s take a quick look at how nascent oxygen in the form of O2 reacts with water. Water will only absorb a maximum of 20 ppm of free oxygen molecules in gas form (O2) when such molecules are bubbled through the solution. This is a chemically verified fact. When water is subjected to additional atmospheric pressure, the amount of dissolved O2 may increase. However, when the pressure is reduced back to its normal atmospheric range, the gas will escape as O2 and the dissolved oxygen content will stabilize at a “normal” dissolved oxygen range of from 4-20 ppm. Temperature can also affect the ability of water to maintain a high level of dissolved oxygen molecules. As water reaches the boiling point, the O2 molecules will be forced out as O2 in its gaseous state. At the lower temperatures, below freezing, the oxygen molecules may be trapped inside the ice crystals that form. Nevertheless, the maximum amount of dissolved oxygen is strictly related to water’s ability to maintain no more

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