smckean (Tosca)
New member
As I'm sure you know, salt water is a fair conductor of electricity (due to the Na and Cl and other ions). OTOH, fresh water is a pretty good insulator. Intuitively, you might think that salt water would be the worse danger since it conducts, but in fact the opposite is true.Interesting Sandy. Care to expand on that? I never thought of that before.
The reason? All electric currents represent a source of electrons that travel thru some medium seeking their way back to the source. So say a boat or a dock is "leaking" electricity into the water. At that point a voltage gradient is established between that point and all paths the electricity could and does take back to the source. The voltage gradient diminishes as the distance from that point increases. If you as a swimmer are near enough to that point where the voltage gradient is strong, since the electrons take any and all paths "down" the voltage gradient, one such path is through your body. Since the amps that flow (number of electrons) are equal to voltage divided by resistance, more amps (or more likely milliamps) flow in the paths of least resistance. In salt water there are lots of low resistance paths to take through the water since salt water presents a low resistance compared to the relatively high resistance path through you; so very little amps go through you. In fresh water you become a lower resistance path relative to the water paths since the fresh water conducts poorly, so more current will flow through you.
Note injury or death can happen in either fresh or salt water, but you have to be very near the source of the electricity leak in salt water for enough voltage potential to exist between one part of your body and another for enough amps to flow through you to hurt you. In fresh water the voltage gradient extends much further out from the source.