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On Fri, 05 Sep 2008 14:00:52 -0400, Jon Mcleod
wrote: A few weeks ago, I asked about generating an 140kHz electric field across a leaf, part of a bio-med lab. Thanks for the answers. But it turns out I misread the roster and was in the wrong group. What I ACTUALLY NEED to do is generate a 100kHz electric field, at 1v/cm, across a T-Bone steak, to measure whether it retards or accelerates decomposition over time. The hypothesis is that the e-field retards growth of certain bacteria inside the meat. A pretty shabby hypothesis. By design, we have not been instructed exactly how to construct the methods and apparatus. I have at my disposal a function generator and various amplifiers. It is a gross oversimplification to just connect one wire to one end of the steak, and another wire at the other end, and apply 20V RMS across a 20cm steak to generate 1V/cm? Yes it is a gross oversimplification. What are your controls? Thanks. Sorry about the idiot questions. Hi Jon, It has been historically proven that the e-fields of 60 Hz current across the ribs of convicts, over time (about several minutes) seriously accelerates decomposition. Sterilization would naturally follow too answering the point about bacteria growth. Between those two obvious observations, it would seem you have a conflicting agenda. The hypothesis you are testing seems to want to simultaneously challenge and support longstanding evidence through shifting frequency without actually specifying how MUCH current should be applied. Thus the hypothesis devolves to: "How does frequency enter into what has already been observed?" Let me point out that this, too, already has longstanding evidence of doing pretty much offering the same outcome; and the state, for the sake of economy, has long since abandoned the hypothesis of performing executions with 100KHz electric chairs. To put it simply, you have to many unstated and unfulfilled variables to call your proposal a hypothesis. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
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#2
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Richard Clark wrote:
On Fri, 05 Sep 2008 14:00:52 -0400, Jon Mcleod wrote: A few weeks ago, I asked about generating an 140kHz electric field across a leaf, part of a bio-med lab. Thanks for the answers. But it turns out I misread the roster and was in the wrong group. What I ACTUALLY NEED to do is generate a 100kHz electric field, at 1v/cm, across a T-Bone steak, to measure whether it retards or accelerates decomposition over time. The hypothesis is that the e-field retards growth of certain bacteria inside the meat. A pretty shabby hypothesis. By design, we have not been instructed exactly how to construct the methods and apparatus. I have at my disposal a function generator and various amplifiers. It is a gross oversimplification to just connect one wire to one end of the steak, and another wire at the other end, and apply 20V RMS across a 20cm steak to generate 1V/cm? Yes it is a gross oversimplification. What are your controls? Thanks. Sorry about the idiot questions. Hi Jon, It has been historically proven that the e-fields of 60 Hz current across the ribs of convicts, over time (about several minutes) seriously accelerates decomposition. Sterilization would naturally follow too answering the point about bacteria growth. Between those two obvious observations, it would seem you have a conflicting agenda. The hypothesis you are testing seems to want to simultaneously challenge and support longstanding evidence through shifting frequency without actually specifying how MUCH current should be applied. Thus the hypothesis devolves to: "How does frequency enter into what has already been observed?" Let me point out that this, too, already has longstanding evidence of doing pretty much offering the same outcome; and the state, for the sake of economy, has long since abandoned the hypothesis of performing executions with 100KHz electric chairs. To put it simply, you have to many unstated and unfulfilled variables to call your proposal a hypothesis. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC Mr. Clark, The control is another steak is similar size from the same grocery packaging, placed in a second apparatus that is not powered. The idea is that a certain frequencies of low-voltage e-fields inhibit cellular mitosis. The professor saw an article in Science magazine about treating cancer with these fields, and decided it would be a nice lab activity for his students to observe other effects with this type of field. http://www.rife.de/files/disruption_...eplication.pdf Since generating an e-field in "meat" or "plant material" is not so easy, this is part of the assignment. We need to figure it out and then fully describe it in our methods section. The leaf people are using high-voltage insulated wires. With "meat", which is larger, I don't think this will work. I am wondering if I can use a low-voltage direct connection. My problem is that our group is weak on electromagnetism. They have been floundering, and now I am floundering with them. I have some ideas, but ideas are best vetted through those with PRACTICAL experience, which you guys seem to have. I have also wasted almost 2 weeks by sitting in the wrong group. OK I am an idiot in terms of BOTH electromagnetism and reading directions. Bottom line: I need to generate a 1V/cm field across a t-bone steak. Merit or no merit (this is college). Does anyone have any place I might look on line, or any book I might buy, or any advice on how I might accomplish this? Thank you. |
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#3
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"Jon Mcleod" wrote in message m... Richard Clark wrote: On Fri, 05 Sep 2008 14:00:52 -0400, Jon Mcleod wrote: A few weeks ago, I asked about generating an 140kHz electric field across a leaf, part of a bio-med lab. Thanks for the answers. But it turns out I misread the roster and was in the wrong group. What I ACTUALLY NEED to do is generate a 100kHz electric field, at 1v/cm, across a T-Bone steak, to measure whether it retards or accelerates decomposition over time. The hypothesis is that the e-field retards growth of certain bacteria inside the meat. A pretty shabby hypothesis. By design, we have not been instructed exactly how to construct the methods and apparatus. I have at my disposal a function generator and various amplifiers. It is a gross oversimplification to just connect one wire to one end of the steak, and another wire at the other end, and apply 20V RMS across a 20cm steak to generate 1V/cm? Yes it is a gross oversimplification. What are your controls? Thanks. Sorry about the idiot questions. Hi Jon, It has been historically proven that the e-fields of 60 Hz current across the ribs of convicts, over time (about several minutes) seriously accelerates decomposition. Sterilization would naturally follow too answering the point about bacteria growth. Between those two obvious observations, it would seem you have a conflicting agenda. The hypothesis you are testing seems to want to simultaneously challenge and support longstanding evidence through shifting frequency without actually specifying how MUCH current should be applied. Thus the hypothesis devolves to: "How does frequency enter into what has already been observed?" Let me point out that this, too, already has longstanding evidence of doing pretty much offering the same outcome; and the state, for the sake of economy, has long since abandoned the hypothesis of performing executions with 100KHz electric chairs. To put it simply, you have to many unstated and unfulfilled variables to call your proposal a hypothesis. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC Mr. Clark, The control is another steak is similar size from the same grocery packaging, placed in a second apparatus that is not powered. The idea is that a certain frequencies of low-voltage e-fields inhibit cellular mitosis. The professor saw an article in Science magazine about treating cancer with these fields, and decided it would be a nice lab activity for his students to observe other effects with this type of field. http://www.rife.de/files/disruption_...eplication.pdf Since generating an e-field in "meat" or "plant material" is not so easy, this is part of the assignment. We need to figure it out and then fully describe it in our methods section. The leaf people are using high-voltage insulated wires. With "meat", which is larger, I don't think this will work. I am wondering if I can use a low-voltage direct connection. My problem is that our group is weak on electromagnetism. They have been floundering, and now I am floundering with them. I have some ideas, but ideas are best vetted through those with PRACTICAL experience, which you guys seem to have. I have also wasted almost 2 weeks by sitting in the wrong group. OK I am an idiot in terms of BOTH electromagnetism and reading directions. Bottom line: I need to generate a 1V/cm field across a t-bone steak. Merit or no merit (this is college). Does anyone have any place I might look on line, or any book I might buy, or any advice on how I might accomplish this? Thank you. the problem is, do you want the field 'inside' the meat, or in the air around the meat? The problem is made harder because the steak is not only a dielectric material, which changes the magnitude of the field, but is also moderately conductive, which essentially shorts out the field. also, the properties depend on the direction of the field... you might want to see if your library has this article: http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpl/freea...rnumber=300250 . personally i would probably go the other way and suspend the meat on an insulating net horizontally and put a plate above and below it that are bigger than the steak. it is much easier to generate a uniform field between large parallel conductive plates than with wires... as a first approximation make the plates about double the largest dimension of the steak. it may be acceptible to set the steak on one of the plates (sterilize it first) and just suspend the other one above it. |
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#4
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Dave wrote:
the problem is, do you want the field 'inside' the meat, or in the air around the meat? The problem is made harder because the steak is not only a dielectric material, which changes the magnitude of the field, but is also moderately conductive, which essentially shorts out the field. also, the properties depend on the direction of the field... you might want to see if your library has this article: http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpl/freea...rnumber=300250 . personally i would probably go the other way and suspend the meat on an insulating net horizontally and put a plate above and below it that are bigger than the steak. it is much easier to generate a uniform field between large parallel conductive plates than with wires... as a first approximation make the plates about double the largest dimension of the steak. it may be acceptible to set the steak on one of the plates (sterilize it first) and just suspend the other one above it. Thank you! In hindsight, obviously applying a field top to bottom will be easier than side-to-side! I need to research it, but I should be able to calculate the voltage required to generate the 1v/cm field in the steak if I know the dielectric constant of the "meat"... One question, what if the plates both touch the steak and I use a smaller voltage? I guess since steak is conductive, keeping the plates at a 1V/cm potential may actually sink a lot of current through the steak and cook it after all. |
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#5
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On Fri, 05 Sep 2008 15:11:20 -0400, Jon Mcleod
wrote: I need to research it, but I should be able to calculate the voltage required to generate the 1v/cm field in the steak if I know the dielectric constant of the "meat"... Hi Jon, The dielectric constant of anything is a sidebar, or distraction, simply because you don't know the dc of the original work's cells either. In all probability they are the same, but this is unnecessary information. More to the matter is where you derive 1V/cm from the original work's application of an average of 550V (nearly 3 orders greater) to 1mm gap (exactly 1 order smaller). Your 1V is off by nearly 4 orders of magnitude. Again, if you were a convict and they let you set the voltage DOWN by 4 orders of magnitude, you might ask for a cool drink while the threw the switch and waited several hours for your execution. They may have to suspend it on account of darkness until the next dawn. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
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#6
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Following my post, I read your source material closer to then ammend
my statements, interleaved below: On Fri, 05 Sep 2008 12:27:57 -0700, Richard Clark wrote: On Fri, 05 Sep 2008 15:11:20 -0400, Jon Mcleod wrote: I need to research it, but I should be able to calculate the voltage required to generate the 1v/cm field in the steak if I know the dielectric constant of the "meat"... Hi Jon, The dielectric constant of anything is a sidebar, or distraction, simply because you don't know the dc of the original work's cells either. In all probability they are the same, but this is unnecessary information. In fact, they do report the dielectric constant, and as I speculated, nearly identical to that of steak (or seawater for that matter). More to the matter is where you derive 1V/cm from the original work's application of an average of 550V (nearly 3 orders greater) to 1mm gap (exactly 1 order smaller). Your 1V is off by nearly 4 orders of magnitude. In fact, they do report 1V/cm. The electric field intensity was mapped within the cell, based on the amplitude (1 V/cm), frequency (100 kHz) and waveform (sine) of the electric field applied to the cell culture. Unfortunately their reference for this was 11. Volakis JL, Chatterjee A, Kempel LC. Finite element method electromagnetics: antennas, microwave circuits, and scattering applications. which cannot be applied to a situation where the wavelength of excitation is 3000 meters and the gap is one thousandth meter. The calculation of 1V/cm based upon the application of an average of 550V across a 1mm gap flies in the face of credulity. However, and again confounding their use of power amplifier to deliver 1 V/cm in the near field, there is the report: The electric field intensity in the culture medium was measured by means of a probe, consisting of two (0.25 mm in diameter) insulated wires with exposed tips 0.5 mm apart, that was dipped in the culture medium. The wires were connected to a high-input impedance differential amplifier that translated the waveform amplitude into a calibrated steady voltage that was digitally recorded. Field intensities throughout the manuscript are expressed in peak voltage amplitude per centimeter (V/cm). Care was taken to eliminate any pickup from the field outside the culture medium. Continuous field monitoring could also be made by measuring the potential drop across a 100 Ohm resistor placed in series with one of the field generating wires. This last statement lacks data about what voltage was observed and says nothing of the contribution of field's interaction with the leads going to it to measure the voltage across them. I can understand your desire to simply shove your function generator's output directly into a steak. It is a choice that is tantilizingly teased as an option given this report of 1 V/cm. It also raises the curious aversion of the authors from performing the same test and removing the absurd complexity of amplifiers and remote senors. Afterall, 1 V/cm is trivial to obtain, demands no external amplification, and whose level can be monitored from the function generator itself. All of this (in concert with missing data and no computation shown) suggests a problematic correlation of results (which are inarguable) to field strength. Again, science would say replicate the conditions and observe if the results follow. You can make your own correlations. All things being practical, the application of an average of 550V across a 1mm gap demands a better reporting of a finding of 1 V/cm in the sample. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
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#7
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"Jon Mcleod" wrote in message ... Dave wrote: the problem is, do you want the field 'inside' the meat, or in the air around the meat? The problem is made harder because the steak is not only a dielectric material, which changes the magnitude of the field, but is also moderately conductive, which essentially shorts out the field. also, the properties depend on the direction of the field... you might want to see if your library has this article: http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpl/freea...rnumber=300250 . personally i would probably go the other way and suspend the meat on an insulating net horizontally and put a plate above and below it that are bigger than the steak. it is much easier to generate a uniform field between large parallel conductive plates than with wires... as a first approximation make the plates about double the largest dimension of the steak. it may be acceptible to set the steak on one of the plates (sterilize it first) and just suspend the other one above it. Thank you! In hindsight, obviously applying a field top to bottom will be easier than side-to-side! I need to research it, but I should be able to calculate the voltage required to generate the 1v/cm field in the steak if I know the dielectric constant of the "meat"... One question, what if the plates both touch the steak and I use a smaller voltage? I guess since steak is conductive, keeping the plates at a 1V/cm potential may actually sink a lot of current through the steak and cook it after all. yes, that would be much harder and may result in cooking.. better to keep an air gap. |
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#8
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One question, what if the plates both touch the steak and I use a smaller voltage? I guess since steak is conductive, keeping the plates at a 1V/cm potential may actually sink a lot of current through the steak and cook it after all. Sure, you can have the plates touch the meat. If it's 1cm thick, put a volt across it, and you're done. As you point out, though, if you put that field on the meat itself (whether by direct contact, or because it's suspended between two plates with air in the middle), current will flow, and heat will be dissipated. Your exercise is to figure out how much, and how hot it gets. Assume the thermal capacity is the same as water. I'd assume the conductivity is about the same as sea water (60 mS/cm) as a start. |
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#9
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On Fri, 05 Sep 2008 18:53:53 GMT, "Dave" wrote:
The problem is made harder because the steak is not only a dielectric material, which changes the magnitude of the field, but is also moderately conductive, which essentially shorts out the field. Hi Jon, through Dave, Let's examine what is offered above, and the fault in a large T-Bone. The original work was performed with an average of 550V across a gap of 1mm which contained a sample of cells. Those cells, too, shorted out the voltage, but across a shorter distance. Most function generators will only source several volts at best, let's call it 5.5V to simplify comparisons. We replicate the field arrangement with a 10cM portion of steak. When we revisit the field strength, we will find it has plunged from the normalized 550,000V/m of the original work to the now feeble 55V/m or 4 orders of magnitude lower field of your suggested work. It would follow from the original author's thesis that your efforts will show 4 orders of magnitude less results. Call it zero. There's no point in doing it without replicating the fields as specified in the original. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
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#10
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Richard Clark wrote:
On Fri, 05 Sep 2008 18:53:53 GMT, "Dave" wrote: The problem is made harder because the steak is not only a dielectric material, which changes the magnitude of the field, but is also moderately conductive, which essentially shorts out the field. Hi Jon, through Dave, Let's examine what is offered above, and the fault in a large T-Bone. The original work was performed with an average of 550V across a gap of 1mm which contained a sample of cells. Those cells, too, shorted out the voltage, but across a shorter distance. Most function generators will only source several volts at best, let's call it 5.5V to simplify comparisons. We replicate the field arrangement with a 10cM portion of steak. When we revisit the field strength, we will find it has plunged from the normalized 550,000V/m of the original work to the now feeble 55V/m or 4 orders of magnitude lower field of your suggested work. It would follow from the original author's thesis that your efforts will show 4 orders of magnitude less results. Call it zero. There's no point in doing it without replicating the fields as specified in the original. Mr. Clark, In the introduction, they describe, "In the present study we show for the first time, to our knowledge, that very low-intensity (2 V/cm), intermediate-frequency (100–300kHz), alternating electric fields induced by insulated electrodes have specific inhibitory effects on dividing cells in culture." The novocure dude is talking about 2 V/cm, and the prof here is talking about 1V/cm. I don't need to duplicate this experiment, I need to immerse a T-Bone into a 1V/cm, 100kHz e-field. I appreciate your help so much, but I don't understand where 550,000V/m is coming from??? |
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