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TYPES
OF OZONE GENERATORS Oxygen is
the only gas that will pick up and hold electrical energy. In doing so, it
becomes tremendously active and seeks to combine with all other substances. The
list of substances that are inert to ozone is very short, and includes glass,
Teflon, Kynar, silicone and gold. Therefore, any ozone generator and auxilliary
equipment must be composed of these substances only. There are several different
techniques used to produce medical grade ozone, where freedom from contamination
is critical. One type
of generator uses an ultraviolet lamp as its source. It produces a very small
amount of ozone in a narrow frequency bandwidth of ultraviolet light. Outside of
that bandwidth, UV destroys ozone. A UV lamp is unreliable because it is subject
to degradation over time, causing uncertainty regarding concentration, and
eventually it burns out. The
second method of ozone production is corona discharge, where a tube with a hot
cathode is surrounded by a screen anode. The best ones are called
dual-dielectric, because they have a layer of glass separating each component
from the gas stream. This prevents contamination of the ozone in the best
designs, but heat is produced, and heat destroys ozone. To compensate for the
loss in concentration, more electricity is used, resulting in more heat, and
consequent electrical failure. This produces generators that have short lives. Lack of
durability has always beset the ozone generator industry, and was one of the
major reasons for naturopaths mostly abandoning ozone therapy during the
Thirties. I have spoken to doctors who have used ozone for three decades and
have gone through a half dozen generators in that time, due to the lack of a
durable generator, and reliable servicing. Fortunately,
there is a third method of producing clean, medical grade ozone. That method is
called cold plasma. It uses two glass rods filled with a noble gas,
electrostatic plasm field which turns the oxygen into ozone. Since there is no
appreciable current, no heat is produced. Thus the generator will last a very
long time, limited only by the quality of the power supply. The original cold
plasma ozone generators were invented by Nikola Tesla in the 1920s, and they
still work 75 years later.
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