Every crystal in our lineup belongs to the quartz family - and quartz is piezoelectric. That means it converts mechanical and electromagnetic energy into an electrical charge. This isn't alternative science. It's the same property used in precision watches, medical ultrasound equipment, and electronic oscillators worldwide.
The crystal chamber in this bottle uses that property. Natural crystals sit in a sealed pod beneath your water. They don't touch the water directly. Instead, the crystal's natural resonance transfers vibrational energy upward through the glass. This subtle, continuous process begins the moment you fill the bottle.
In the 1990s, researcher Masaru Emoto photographed ice crystals formed from water exposed to different environments be it music, words, or intention. His work was controversial, but it opened a question researchers are still exploring: can water retain information from its surroundings?
Dr. Gerald Pollack at the University of Washington took it further documenting a structured, gel-like phase of water that forms near certain surfaces. Peer-reviewed, published, and repeatable. We don't claim to have the final answer. But the idea that water responds to its environment is no longer fringe.
The bottle's crystal chamber responds to the energy around it. On its own, natural quartz generates a subtle piezoelectric field whenever it's handled or exposed to temperature changes. But when you place the bottle next to a Schumann device, you're adding a real, measurable electromagnetic signal to that environment.
The V1 Classic outputs a continuous 7.83 Hz field. Earth's natural resonance. The V2 Pro lets you choose any frequency from 0.1 to 999.99 Hz. That electromagnetic field passes through the glass, interacts with the piezoelectric crystals, and creates conditions for a deeper imprint on the water inside. It's the same principle behind the bottle, just amplified.
Piezoelectricity is established science. The structured behavior of water near certain surfaces is documented in university-led research. The connection between electromagnetic fields and water's molecular arrangement is an active, growing area of study.
We built this bottle at the intersection of what's proven and what's promising. We're not making medical claims. We're not calling it a cure. We're offering a tool designed around real physical properties, and a growing body of research that suggests your water's environment matters more than most people think.