Greetings all,
I’m a first time poster here, and the last time I had any chemistry/biology was my junior year in college some eight years ago. Also, I’m sure for anyone with a strong science background this will fall into the “dumb question” category.
Here’s my question (and then a little background info): is it possible to change the pH of water without adding anything to it?
Here’s why I’m asking: a couple days ago a good friend of mine tells me that her father bought some kind of quacky water machine that can change the pH of tap water. It’s called “Kangen” water. (And it’s from Japan, of course.) She gave me a DVD to watch that features some obvious cheeseball spewing a bunch of jargon and mumbo-jumbo about platinum plates, molecule clusters and more.
Even with my limited knowledge/experience, I’m 99.99999% sure this is an absolute hoax. But then again, it’s been years since I’ve had any type of science instruction, and I want to make doubly sure my instincts are correct before I confront them about this machine. Now I’d leave well enough alone, but this family actually thinks that this machine can produce alkaline water (with a pH of 9.5) to drink, and acidic water (with a pH of 3 or something like that) that can be used as a disinfectant—which, in my mind, is what makes this thing so dangerous. They shouldn’t be using supposedly “acidic” water to wipe down cutting boards, etc.
I’m at a loss to explain how people that are normally smart consumers (and in good health too) could fall prey to such a ridiculous contraption. The psychology this company uses on their promotional DVD is nothing short of brilliant quackery, complete with warnings “to slowly increase the pH of the water you drink over a few weeks to give your body time to adjust.”
I also intend to get samples of the various waters that this thing can produce (acidic through alkaline) and take them to a local lab. The testing is going to show that they’re all identical, right?
Cheers,
Andy