this is what I was starting to understand after searching this forum.
Understanding the PerSulfuric formation would better would really help.
This patent (
https://patents.google.com/patent/WO2005016511A1/en) suggests the temperature needs to stay below 20C if that is true high current reactions will be less than ideal as the local temperature at the formation site will be raised above that thus other chemicals may be being formed.
I haven't yet read the whole patent.
Edit: actually I don't think this is the right patent. but US patent # 2,185,858 suggests staying under 37.8C 100F
Also I am now thinking that if the H
2SO5 is formed at the surface (as I read somewhere here) then slowly lowering the material into the liquid would be more efficient.
WTF are you on about WATTS for Gregory
Using just amps to explain current is like using km to describe speed. It only tells half the story.
Yeah you went 100k but how long did it take.
or You traveled for an hour but how far did you go?
I used 2 amps but at what voltage.
Or I used 12 volts but at what amps.
using watts gives useful information that will more clearly reflect to others what is going on.