Bro, I do not know in which context you are saying Hydrogen ions are negatively charged.
But as far as I know, Hydrogen ions are positively charged and not negatively charged.
2 H2O ⇌ H3O+(Hydronium ion)
+ OH−(hydroxide ion)
In this context what I meant is hydroxide ion and not hydrogen ion as early
written.Sorry for being written as it early.This hydroxide ion is negatively
charged.
In nature positive ions are commonly formed by high winds, dust, humidity and pollution and are at their highest just before an electrical storm. This has been hypothesized as why so many people feel so uneasy before a storm and why respiratory problems are commonly reported at this time as well.
If you’ve ever spent a lot of time walking beside a busy road or inside a laundromat you will have experienced the tiring effects of a highly positively charged environment. Unfortunately, our modern-day homes and workplaces have also become chronic generators of potentially harmful positive ions.
Office air-conditioning systems, fluorescent lights and electrical and computer equipment are all potent positive ion generators.
In your home, fluorescent lighting and electrical equipment such as televisions and clothes dryers are big outputers of positive ions, as are the fibers in carpets, curtains and upholstery. Women’s hair dryers are particularly strong source as well.
Worse still, as many homes are often well sealed from the air outside, there’s little chance for negative ions to counteract this damage.
Additionally, unless you live in the country, opening your window may not be that beneficial anyway. Large towns and city environments have sometimes been tested as having less than a third of the beneficial negative ions in the air when compared to country environments, along with a variety of other damaging pollutants.
Negatively charged ions are the opposite of positive ions and they have directly the opposite effect on your health, mood and energy levels.
Negative ions are created when a molecule gains a negatively charged electron. Due to this nature, they are statically attracted to airborne particles like dust, mold and other pollutants and potential allergens.
By attaching to these pollutants and allergens they give them a negative charge and, rather than drifting in the air, they are grounded and fall to the floor or nearest surface. Even bacteria and viruses circling in a room may be heavily reduced by negative ions attaching to them and removing them from the air.
In the natural world, negative ions are in abundance, particularly in forests, at the beach and most intensely near waterfalls. This is a good part of the reason why you usually feel so great in these places and find it difficult to be tired or depressed.