Short stories of human inventions
John Kanzius – New Revolution Of RF Technology
Born on 1944, John Kanzius, an American inventor, radio and TV engineer and one-time station owner from Erie, Pennsylvania managed to invent a method that might be used to treat cancer using Radio Frequency (RF). He also claims that he had found a way to actually “burn saltwater” during his experiments. Kanzius started to research the use of RF for cancer treatment because of his own experiences undergoing chemotherapy as he’s a non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma patient himself.
Cancer Related Invention:
In Kanzius RF cancer therapy, the infected cells are tagged with small particles on the nano-scale such as single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNT) or gold nanoparticles (GNP), When these particles are subjected to RF it heats up and killing the infected cells and spearing the healthy ones.
Since April 23rd of 2007, his RF device is showing promising results on cancer infected animals at the M. D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston (by Dr. Steven A. Curley, Professor in Surgical Oncology) and The University of Pittsburgh Medical Center (by Dr. David A. Geller, co-director of the Liver Cancer Center). It now awaits the federal approval to be tested on humans.
Unlike the current tumor removal methods using RF that requires the insertion of probes in or around the cancer cell, Kanzuis’ device works at close proximity.
Steven A. Curley, a Pioneer doctor who made clinical studies which ended with a Food and Drugs Administration (FDA) approving a treatment of unresectable primary and metastatic hepatobiliary malignancies aslo by RF, said that Kanzuis’ method is one of the greatest recent innovations.
The first prototype which Kanzuis himself made in his home was successfully tested by Klune et al. at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center. Also as of the first of November 2007, all experiments carried out on rabbits with cancer tumors have a success rate of 100% leaving the rabbits unscaved.
Water Fuel Related Discovery:
Kanzius, later that year, stated that the same RF transmitter has the ability to actually make salt water catch fire. This revelation took place accidentally while he was trying to know if these radio waves can be used to desalinize water. He said that they were experimenting for something that might desalinize saltwater rather than an energy source, and the more they try, the saltwater gets hotter until it caught fire. At that point, this method can’t be used as an energy source because it used more energy to generate the waves than the energy of the burning gas.
He didn’t say that his finding would replace oil as an energy source and only described it as “interesting”. The tell tails of his process are still not published until it’s patented. He explains that the energy from radio waves absorbed by the water weakens the covalent bond between oxygen and hydrogen to an extent that pairs of both hydrogen and oxygen are created, producing dihydrogen and dioxygen molecules. These newly formed molecules are also affected by the energy of the radio waves which causes them to get in a relatively close proximity in a process called reunification causing them to react together forming water molecules once again and releasing energy in the form of a flame.
| Print article | This entry was posted by merlin on June 8, 2009 at 17:30, and is filed under Technology. Follow any responses to this post through RSS 2.0. You can leave a response or trackback from your own site. |



