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deuterium

that finally leads to the higher duty hydrogen ratio because the membrane process always will discriminate okay you are deuterium i keep you inside your
Concept
deuterium
Score
7 · always · causes · because
Status
candidate — not yet promoted to canon

Corpus evidence — top 10 passages

Most-relevant passages from the entire indexed corpus (67,286 paragraph chunks across YouTube transcripts, PubMed, arXiv, archive.org, Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, OpenAlex, and more) ranked by semantic similarity (bge-small-en-v1.5).

  1. 01 · yt0.799

    Anything that has a higher atomic atomic mass, tends not to stick around too long. Why? Because it has actually less energy per unit density in it. So when you think about hydrogen, which is the lightest element on the periodic table, H+ is is atomic mass number one or or the first element on the table. Well, dutyium um and what just so people understand, hydrogen is a proton with an electron. That's all it is. Okay, dutyium is a proton plus a neutron plus an electron. So what does that mean? It has double the atomic mass of regular hydrogen. So that means it's twice as heavy. Okay, that is a

    yt/MSJk1RDH7Aw-uc-327-water-light-and-magnetism-for-health-with-dr-jack-kru/transcript.txt

  2. 02 · _intake0.791

    > petroleum products at different fractions they can do that with hydrogen so deuterium is heavier so it's a heavier fraction than a lot of fractions so they literally boil it up condense it down and capture the lighter fraction and repeat that process under pressure to give you low deuterium water extremely expensive incredibly inefficient and it's something that I could never use if I was the start of ddw company because it just goes against my environmental principles which is no no

    _intake/claims-allbranch/curated-low/deuterium/009-petroleum-products-at-different-fractions-they-can-do-that-w.md

  3. 03 · _intake0.785

    > it's deuterium depleted because it's gone through glycolysis so then it can enter the TCA cycle without having to go through that process again correct the one thing a lot of people I

    _intake/claims-allbranch/curated-low/deuterium/003-it-s-deuterium-depleted-because-it-s-gone-through-glycolysis.md

  4. 04 · pubmed0.782

    Deuterium is a natural heavy isotope of hydrogen, having a neutron as well as a proton. Deuterium disrupts ATP synthesis in mitochondria, causing increased production of reactive oxygen species and reduced synthesis of ATP. Gut microbes likely play a significant role in providing deuterium depleted short chain fatty acids (SCFAs) to human colonocytes through hydrogen gas recycling. The production of deuterium depleted (deupleted) nutrients necessarily leaves behind deuterium enriched water, unless there is a process that can sequester deuterium in small molecules that are excreted through the

    pubmed/PMID-40496345-is-deuterium-sequestering-by-reactive-carbon-atoms-an-import/info.md

  5. 05 · _intake0.779

    Hydrogen is the **rogue element in the periodic table** that breaks all the rules we expect, and this is why life uses it in her designs. When a hydrogen bond forms between two water molecules, the redistribution of electrons changes the ability for further hydrogen bonding. In this sense, a hydrogen bond can be electrostatic. Hydrogen bonds, however, can become covalent as well. Iodine’s addition to hydrogen favors the formation of covalent bonding in water. This is a fancy way of saying hydrogen makes other atoms do things they normally might not want to do. **Hydrogen’s will is strong becau

    _intake/kruse-blog-corpus/articles/tensegrity-6-hydrogen-bonding-networks-water.md

  6. 06 · yt0.778

    It It is thought by some that this slowing down of reactions um, caused by deuterium, which is think of it is heavier and it moves slower, okay? Even though that's not very scientific, that this um, this could this could encumber things that are needed during fetal formation. Got it. So, we just ate. Nobody knows enough. Don't do it. Do your normal thing. Have pure water. Uh, and and and frankly, if if you said, "Hey, could you have even 130 parts per million?" There are people who do it on 130 parts per million in history with no adverse effects. So, maybe that would be, but I you'd never tak

    yt/wCEztiKMXx0-badass-biohacks-deuterium-depleted-water-molecular-hydrogen-/transcript.txt

  7. 07 · yt0.777

    And isotopes in their reactions and their involvement in chemistry pretty much can substitute for the simplest form of the of the element. So deuterium can substitute. So let's take water, H2O, right? We normally think of that H as the simple H, one proton, one electron, and two of those combine with oxygen to form a water molecule. But you know what? Deuterium can do it too. So deuterium, let's if we call it D and this is where kind of it gets tricky cuz people are trying to track, okay, you call protium H, you call deuterium D. But so you can have two protium and oxygen to make a water molec

    yt/wCEztiKMXx0-badass-biohacks-deuterium-depleted-water-molecular-hydrogen-/transcript.txt

  8. 08 · pubmed0.773

    - **PMID**: 19719272 - **DOI**: 10.1021/jp9021568 - **PMCID**: - **Journal**: The journal of physical chemistry. B · **Year**: 2009 - **Authors**: Qing Zhao, Kate Ovchinnikova, Binghua Chai, Hyok Yoo, Jeff Magula, Gerald H Pollack - **MeSH**: Hydrogen-Ion Concentration, Membranes, Artificial, Osmosis, Protons, Sulfates, Water - **URL**: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19719272/ - **Captured**: 2026-05-10T11:11:26

    pubmed/PMID-19719272-role-of-proton-gradients-in-the-mechanism-of-osmosis/info.md

  9. 09 · yt0.770

    And um they reduce from about 25 on an Australian straight line curve to uh end of life. The number of mitochondria, or is it the ability to produce ATP? Both. Okay. Part of that reason is because it's gnawed away at the mitochondrial mechanisms. Are gnawed or are eaten away by the deuterium. And I'll explain how that happens in a second, but your bodies, your mitochondria, are uh when they receive a high deuterium in the molecules of, let's say, that they're going to burn, okay? In the Krebs cycle, etc. The Krebs cycle, for those of you who know, uh is occurs exists in the mitochondria, and i

    yt/wCEztiKMXx0-badass-biohacks-deuterium-depleted-water-molecular-hydrogen-/transcript.txt

  10. 10 · yt0.767

    And those variations we call isotopes. I think a lot of people have heard that. It's used in medicine and so on. But hydrogen happens to have three isotopes. One is the regular hydrogen we'll call it. That's just a proton and an and an electron. The simplest element that was created. And then another isotope the second isotope is heavier because it has taken on a neutron into its nucleus. So you have a proton, a neutron, and an electron. And that's called deuterium. And it was created at the very beginning also. The neutron really liked playing in the sandbox with the proton. And then there is

    yt/wCEztiKMXx0-badass-biohacks-deuterium-depleted-water-molecular-hydrogen-/transcript.txt

Curation checklist

  • ☐ Verify excerpt against source recording
  • ☐ Tag tier (axiom · law · principle · primary derivation · observation)
  • ☐ Cross-cite to ≥1 primary source (PubMed / arXiv / archive.org)
  • ☐ Promote to bucket-canon/05-biophysics/