Marshall wrote:

> Silver chloride dissolved in water dissassociate into negative chlorine
and
> positive silver ions.  That would be a form of ionic silver, but in this
case a
> compound.  High concentrations of ionic silver must be in the form of a
> compound as I outlined a week or so ago..

Not so. Silver chloride is not water soluble. Once silver chloride forms it
does not dissolve in water and does not dissociate into its component ions.

frank key



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