• vastly increase recoverable ore
In tests conducted by several mines, Brown's Gas treated ore allowed recovery of up to three times more mineral. Brown's Gas can be used to treat waste dumps of obsolete mines, recovering more mineral than the mine originally produced. Again, this application is worth billions of dollars.
• surface treatment of materials
When a Brown's Gas flame is played over the surface of materials, there are effects that can be beneficial. Iron becomes rust resistant, and can be surface hardened to prevent wear. Brick and cement become corrosion and water proof.
• inexpensive toxic waste disposal
Brown's Gas is an implosive flame, with the power to reduce nearly any material to it's basic components (usually nontoxic). So enclosed chambers can be built to vaporize PCBs and other toxic waste.
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• transmutation
We've learned of two ways of using Brown's Gas to make materials that did not exist in the original samples.
• creating new industrial materials
Brown's Gas can both make and weld rubies together. Brown's Gas can weld sapphires together. When Brown's Gas cooks rocks, it turns then into semiprecious material; for example feldspar (30% of earth's crust) turns into a transparent form of moonstone, which can be used as a nearly indestructible building material (colors can be added).
• neutralization of radioactive waste
It has now been officially proven (in Canada) that Brown's Gas can neutralize radioactive waste in seconds, easily and extremely inexpensively. This neutralization treatment can take place right at the nuclear reactor so there is no need to transport or store nuclear waste.
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