Yah I forgot about the harmonics of the piece.
I was mostly using that as an example.
I can find studies where they project frequencies into various atomic structures to see what happens, but I'm trying to find credible info where they can predict the frequency to break an atomic bond with math.
I'm doing a project to show the break down of a dielectric given so many volts per meter before break down occurs. and I picked pure water for a dielectric.
I'm using DC, but I was trying to figure out what would happen to the bonds in H2O molecules if they were subjected to different frequencies. Like what frequency would cause enough disturbance to cause the bonds to break?
I know the H2O molecule is polarized, and creating a positive and negative field line them up + - + - etc...
But if I use alternating voltages, I can make it go from +-+- to -+-+ and back again.
But I had a better idea, if I kept +-+- and then pulsed the DC on/off at high voltage (Lower than straight DC dielectric break down) and a high pulsing frequency.
I have been doing some research and learned that water is polarized.
I'm not a chemistry expert. I just think that with a high enough voltage, and fluctuating it on/off, I can cause a dielectric break down, but at a lower voltage.
Much like capacitors, they can function for example up to 200 volts DC, but only up to 40KHz at 100 volts. and above those specs, you have a popped cap.
Or like when your car is stuck in a sunken hole in the grass. you dont just put it in drive and press the gas, you rock it forward and backward to help it break free.
I figure, the same should be possible with an atomic bond. You could rock the atoms back and forth enough to where they break apart simply from the momentum.
I was looking at it like a pendulum. It takes a force to start the swinging, but without a continuous low energy push as it goes up each side, it will find balance at center. But with increased pushing force and speed, that string holding the pendulum weight will break instead of acting like an elastic and helping pull it back the other way.
I hope I'm explaining this right. I'm not a chemistry expert, I'm just an electrical engineer.
and I'm just trying to see if I can break down the dielectric of water sooner at a lower voltage if I operate the DC at a specific pulsing frequency that causes the bonds to fatigue and snap apart or something.
EDIT:
I know the principles behind a microwave, it creates heat by injecting frequencies (radiation) into the food, and the rotation of the atoms like water, causes friction and heat.
I figure, I can keep the atoms lined up, and cause them to physically bend back and forth until I can snap them apart.