
Originally Posted by
PoolDoc
Hi Waterbear;
There are a couple of things in your post I'm not sure about, and a couple of others I'm not comfortable with. I'm going to ask Richard to weigh in on the ones I'm not sure about.
1. You put a lot of emphasis on achieving a borate level very close to 50 ppm. I'm aware of some reasons to try to reach 50 ppm; I'm not aware of any substantial reasons to avoid reaching 75 ppm. So, my question is, are there good reasons to try to achieve an accurate 50 ppm, as opposed to simply reaching 50 ppm OR more?
Borate is a bit toxic at higher levels (mainly to dogs) and the effective target has been found to be 30-50 ppm for a halogen sanitized spa or pool and and 80 ppm for a biguanide santized pool or spa (as determined in the test pools of the patent holders for the borate products on the market for pools and spas.)
Also, the dosing method (adding half and then the other half) is the one used by Proteam (the orginal borate patent holder) and it works well from my experience.
The reason we test the pool is so we know what we need to add, how much we need to add, and when we need to add it. The DUMP and GO method of pool care, IMHO, leads to more problems than it solves. Is this not why we recommend using a Taylor K-2006 for testing? If not then strips would certainly provide the precision we needed to balance water, even with their unreliability! Borate is not a one time addition any more than CYA or Salt is. While it is true that they do not move that fast we still need to test the level and keep it in range just as with any other water parameter and the effective range has been found to be 30 to 50 ppm. (
2. It's my understanding -- and experience -- that a hot aerated spa, maintained at a pH of 7.6 or below will rapidly achieve a carbonate alkalinity near zero, and that any remaining TA will be from borates and CYA. I don't understand a basis for your statements suggesting that -- on a hot aerated spa with pH held below 7.8 -- it is practical to maintain a TA (with a CA component) of ~80 ppm.
First, it was apparent to me that the OP has a combo spillover spa/pool that is a single body of water and when the spa is desired it is isolated by valves or actuators and the spa is brought up to temperature. I have a similar setup myself. Therefore, my recommendation holds. If it were an isolated spa we have found over at PoolSpaForum that with a spa using the dichlor/bleach method (BBB modified for the higher water temps in spas) that a TA as low as 50 ppm and the addition of 50 ppm borate provides good pH control (thanks chem geek!). (If traditional Dichlor or three step bromine or 2 step bromine with MPS shocking is used then the acidic nature of the dichlor, DCDMH, and/or MPS tend to negate this somewhat by their constant addition of acidic material. However, we have found that, even with these methods of spa care the addition of 50 ppm borate useful given the high aeration normally present in spas because of the aerators and jets.) However, the OP was describing rising pH from a SWCG (also from aeration caused by hydrogen bubble generation in the cell), which is not uncommon, and the recommendations I gave (TA 70, CYA max, pH window 7.6 to 7.8) DO and WILL help when done together by minimizing the ougassing of CO2 and the borate to 50 ppm provides an extra layer of pH control that will decrease acid demand in most cases by quite a bit if the main cause of pH rise is outgassing. If there is also other factors such as curing plaster that are the primary cause of the acid demand then the effect of these water maintenance parameters will not be as pronounced but will still help to a degree.
3. It's my understanding that a buffer does not have a 'direction'. Rather, in the range of a buffer's activity (ie, at the points where conversion between acid states, such as -HCO2 <=> =CO3) you will have a bi-directional resistance to pH change, since change in either direction will either absorb or release a proton (hydrogen ion). Consequently, it's not true that "Borates introduce a secondary buffer into the water which works to lower pH while the primary bicarbonate buffer works to raise pH", though it is true that borates and carbonates have different ranges of high activity.
While it is true that a buffer made from a weak acid and its conjugate base will absorb or release a proton as needed the actual pH of the buffer is dependent on the amount of the acid or base present. With the carbonic acid/bicarbonate buffer found in pools and spa most of the buffer exists in the form of bicarbonte ion at normal pool pH range (because of the constant ougassing of CO2 and therefore the constand loss of carbonic acid) and therefore the pH of the system will move toward 8.3 because it has a higher limit for the amount of hydrogen ions it can absorb than release.
The boric acid/borate buffer system is mainly boric acid at normal pool pH and therefore will tend to move the pH downward since boric acid does not outgas and the Henderson-Hasselbalch calculaton wil give us a lower pH. In other words, it can relase more hydrogen ions that it can absorb.
Because of this these two buffer systems together therefore have a tendency to move the pH in different directions, which is why they tend to stabilize the pH around 7.7.
Simplifed explanaton but basically correct.
Unfinished - To be continued later this morning, and I'll add a thread in the contributors' section for a policy discussion on accuracy and adding acid.
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