By John Pint
For
some time I’ve heard rumors about the amazing Bat-Gen (also spelled
Batt//Gen) of Dr. Arturo Solís of Aguascalientes, Mexico: a new and
different source of electricity that he says may someday power our
homes and vehicles.
Finally, I found myself
heading for Aguascalientes
on business and I decided it was time to stop in at the Human
Photosynthesis Study Center, hoping I might have a chance to examine
the Bat-Gen and interview Dr. Solís.
The drive from Guadalajara
to Aguascalientes is via good toll roads and took only two and a half
hours. When I arrived at the Center, I discovered that it is also a
clinic for people with eye problems. I walked into the reception room
and was surprised at how many patients were waiting to see the doctor.
There were about 25 chairs and after a while most of them were full and
it was obvious that these were local people, families with lots of
kids. In my mind I gave Dr. Solís a plus because I have only noted this
phenomenon in the waiting rooms of really talented doctors. In my
opinion, if the neighborhood Mexican mamas say a doctor is good, it
means he’s
good. Of course, with so many people ahead of me, I figured I’d never
get to do my interview, but after a short wait, I was ushered into an
office and shook hands with the doctor, a big man with an easy-going
manner.
There on the desk sat a Bat-Gen, a sealed
plastic
cylinder about 15 cm tall and 5 in diameter. Dr. Solís attached a
voltmeter and the reading was 1.2 volts. “What’s unusual about this,”
he “said, is that it’s more of generator than a battery. Look what
happens if I short it out.” He touched a small wrench to the two poles
and the voltmeter read 0. Then he took away the wrench. After a couple
seconds, the meter read 0.2, then 0.4, and slowly the voltage return to
1.2. If you short out a conventional battery, it’s dead, but this thing
appeared to be producing electricity all by itself.
From what I
understand, the Bat-Gen contains melanin suspended in water. Dr. Solís
says that melanin in human beings acts as a catalyst to split water
molecules into hydrogen and oxygen, producing energy. He states that
the first prototype units which he made in 2007 have been producing
electricity without interruption ever since. A Hello Kitty in the
corner of his office—attached to a Bat-Gen—has been waving at visitors
for months since a visit from a Chinese delegation.
“In January
of 2005,” says Solís, “I listened to a speech by George W. Bush, who
said that substances are needed that can separate the hydrogen atom
from water, so that we can fully enter into the hydrogen era. I
wondered: why don’t they use melanin? I set about the task of finding
the answer and I did find it.”
In 2005 he applied for a patent
for “A new photo electrochemical procedure to break the water molecule
into hydrogen and oxygen using as the main substrate melanins, their
precursors, analogues or derivatives.” Since then he has been granted
this patent in Russia, Brazil, Australia, New Zealand, Mexico and—only
two months ago—in the USA.
I asked Dr. Solís how he first became interested in melanin.
“In
1980 I began to study the three main causes of blindness because these
have remained the main causes all over the world for the last 50
years…and the treatments don’t work very well. So I was studying the
human optic nerve which is very small, the size of 12 human hairs
together. I magnified it and when I got it large enough, I could see
that there was melanin there. I found it in the optic nerves of 6000
patients! And I asked myself the question: ‘What’s it there for?’ So I
went to my teachers, but they didn’t know. Then I began to ask people
at congresses, but they didn’t know either. Twelve years later, one day
in February, I found it. I saw that the melanin was splitting the water
molecule. What I was witnessing was human photosynthesis.”
Solís
added that it has long been thought that people get energy from
glucose, but, according to him, glucose is only a source of biomass,
producing skin, bones, nails, etcetera, “but in reality the energy
comes from the hydrogen released by human photosynthesis. Melanin is
1000 times more efficient than chlorophyll. Melanin requires a
trillionth of a second to split the water molecule, but this process,
like any chemical reaction, is influenced by concentrations,
temperature, moisture, light, etc.”
“When people reach the age
of 26,” he continued, “their melanin begins to lose its capacity to do
this, and after 50 the process goes into freefall. I should mention
that cold weather slows down the process, as does the consumption of
alcohol and –believe it or not—iron supplements.”
Solís’ focus
on melanin led him on a search for ways to help people in whom the
substance is no longer doing its job properly, for example, the elderly
or people affected with Parkinson’s or Alzheimer’s. The result was a
product he calls Qiapi 1, which he says enhances human photosynthesis.
I soon learned that many of the people coming to his clinic were taking
Qiapi for eye and other problems.
“Does it work?” I asked
him and he showed me a series of Before and
After videos of people walking into his consultation room. One was a
woman suffering from spasms so badly she could hardly make it from the
door to the chair. After a few months on Qiapi she walks into the same
room a changed person, with a confident stride, her face radiant. It
was quite dramatic and you can see several similar video clips on
YouTube under Fotosíntesis Humana.
“What does Qiapi mean?” I asked Solís.
“Well,
when I went to register the compound they asked for a name which could
not be confused with any other. So I played around with the letters of
the chemical components and came up with Qiapi.”
“How does Qiapi work?” I asked.
“When
I understood the process of human photosynthesis via melanin—not
completely, because it’s very complex—I began to look at many compounds
that could assist the process. I think my selection was good because,
since 1998 I haven’t changed the formula. It really works well. For
example, if a woman takes it during pregnancy, her photosynthesis is
enhanced and problems like Down Syndrome and Cerebral Palsy are
prevented, but it’s not Qiapi that’s doing this, it’s nature that’s
doing it.”
For more information, see “Melanin:
energy of the
future.” Pages 9-15 of this PDF are in English. You can
contact Dr.
Solís, who speaks English, at Tel (52) 449 916-0048 and Email
[email protected]. The webpage is humanphotosynthesis.com,
If you
have comments on anything in this article which you’d like to share
with the world, contact me at [email protected] .
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