I've been thinking about copper...
Some time this week a post was made about copper in poolwater. The general consensus was that once there, it's impossible to remove unless you drain the pool.
This got me to thinking about using the principles of electroplating to remove copper from poolwater. So I fire up google and perform a search on "Copper removal" and found a page by a young college guy who was doing experiments with copper.
After briefly viewing his page, I fired off this email:
Tim,
I am a pool owner that has a slight problem as it relates to copper and upon
trying to discover a permanent solution to copper disolved in pool water, I
came upon your site.
Folks tell me that there is no way to permanently remove
copper from pool water. They tell me that I can bind it up so that swimmers
won't get green hair; however it is a very temporary fix.
If the bather load in the pool is high, at the end of the swim it is typical to
"shock" the pool with large amounts of chlorine (I use 6% laundry bleach for
this purpose) which then causes the copper to precipitate out of solution. Thus leading one to add a chemical to bind it up again. Catch-22.
I am hoping you can tell me if there is a way to permanently remove copper
by electrolysis and if there is, would you be so kind as to describe how to go
about it?
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And I recieved a prompt reply
(next post...)
And finally, the last reponse from Tim
> I found a pure commercial grade titanium basket for $44:
> http://www.coleparmer.com/catalog/pr...sp?sku=5940100
>
> Do you think this would be sufficient for the cathode?
Hmm, that would be pretty nice. :)
> I also found a pretty good resource for industrial graphite. It's
> surprising that it can be had for so cheap!
> http://www.andale.com/store?view=CAT...=176000&mode=1
Hmm, be nice if they had cheaper though (i.e. no need for +/-0.005"
tolerance or tighter!).
Surface area is what reacts, so you need to maximize surface area,
especially with such a large volume of water. For the same reason, you need
to circulate the water pretty quickly, too.
> 10 AMPS?!!!?!????!!!?? Wow. Would a reduction in the amount of amps cause
> a significant performance penalty?
I don't know, it depends on how much copper is available for the electrodes
to remove. You could probably get away with an amp or less, especially if
your pump is slow.
Relax, 10 amps at 5V is only 50W. Your computer monitor consumes double
that.
Remember you're adjusting voltage to change current. You'll need a variable
power supply of some sort, and an ammeter. Remember to keep the connections
out of the water, especially on the anode side, else you'll defeat the whole
purpose of using graphite in the first place :)
> My pool pump can recirculate the entire contents of my pool about 5 times
> a day, therefore I don't think that I would run out of copper atoms.
I don't know about that. I'm thinking you'll be able to remove "all" the
copper roughly around the electrodes (maybe, ehrr.. 10 gallons worth?) in a
couple minutes, so you'd want the water flowing through, as systematically
as possible, to remove the copper.
In fact, the best solution might be to pump all the pool's water through a
section of 3" PVC pipe containing the apparatus. If you somehow have
another pool to empty the processed water into, you can systematically
process the entire pool without the cleaned product diluting what's there,
slowing the process down a lot.
> It was a rather big bowl. I would say about 4 feet in diameter.
> Lot's of surface area.
Ah, then that could do it.
> Would electrolysis work to also remove the iron in my pool using the same
> materials (graphite and titanium)? If not, what should I use?
It might, if the iron is in solution. Again, insoluble stains are best
treated with, well, stain removers...
> Here is the process I am considering taking:
>
> 1.) Drop pH to 6.8 -- any more and I risk damaging pool components (pump
> etc.)
> 2.) Add citric acid to remove iron in pool
> 3.) Add EDTA to bind up the Iron and Copper
> 4.) Insert electroplating device into pool
> 5.) Test copper and iron levels regularly
>
> Plausible? Or should I just live with the copper?
I would skip the EDTA, since you want the copper freely available for the
electrolysis.
Oh- one thing I forgot to think of, graphite tends to erode under
electrolysis. It shouldn't be a problem if you keep current density low,
but if you see black stuff flaking off that doesn't want to filter very
well... you might want to try a different method!
Tim
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I am drawing up some plans to build a device to do this. For those of you who are experts here, what do you think. Does this sound like something that is doable?
Drawbacks?
Troy