I hear it all the time. "Why would I even want to inhale hydrogen gas!" Here are the three simple reasons. The first one is the benefits H2 is becoming more and more popular around the world because of its potential therapeutic benefits it can give to the human body....
Dummies Guide To Hydrogen
Approximately 62% of all the atoms in most animal species are Hydrogen atoms with 24% Oxygen and another 12% Carbon. It makes sense that hydrogen and its electrons are essential in nearly every molecule and function throughout the body, and if there is not enough of them to go around,...
The Power of Hydrogen
When it comes to Healthcare, hydrogen can do some amazing and remarkable things. Molecular Hydrogen (i.e. H2 gas) is gaining significant attention from academic researchers, medical doctors, scientists, and physicians around the world for its recently reported therapeutic potential. One of the earlier publications on hydrogen as a medical gas...
Electrolysis
Electrolysis is simply using electricity to cause the decomposition of water (H2O) into hydrogen gas (H2) and oxygen gas (O2). Electrolysis was discovered in 1800 by Anthony Carlisle and William Nicholson2 and is now the primary method of mass-producing hydrogen gas.
Hydrogen is Emerging as a Medical Gas (Part 2)
Antioxidant-Like Effect It was initially suggested that the beneficial effect of hydrogen was due to an antioxidant as hydrogen selectively neutralized cytotoxic hydroxyl radicals 1 in vitro. However, although H2 reduces *OH radicals 2, as has been shown in various systems 1, 4, 5, it may not occur via direct...
Hydrogen is Emerging as a Medical Gas (Part 1)
Introduction Molecular hydrogen (i.e. H2 gas) is gaining significant attention from academic researchers, medical doctors, and physicians around the world for its recently reported therapeutic potential 1. One of the earliest publications on hydrogen as a medical gas was in 1975, by Dole and colleagues from Baylor University and Texas A&M 2....
Understanding pH
Potential Hydrogen or pH is a figure expressing the acidity or alkalinity of a solution on a logarithmic scale from 0 to 14. More acidic solutions have lower pH. More alkaline solutions have higher pH. The pH is equal to −log10 c, where c is the hydrogen ion concentration in...