Re: Lowering Alk -- fountain or ripple
Chemistry nerd alert. I am trying to simplify the explanation of a confusing topic so if you already understand the chemistry involved you might question my explanation somewhat, If you understand it then this really isn't for you.
Ok, let me see if I can explain this without confusing anyone. Alkalinity is referring to what is also called carbonate hardness (kH) and that is a term that most aquarists are familiar with. It has to do with the carbonic acid/bicarbonate buffer system in the water. (A buffer system is something that helps keep your pH from bouncing all over the place and at a certain pH level. It consists of a mild acid and it's corresponding alkaline ion.)
If you lower pH you will shift it to more carbonic acid (which is just carbon dioxide gas, CO2, dissolved in water, also known as club soda) and less bicarbonate ion but the alkalinity of the water has not lowered.
If you now airate the water you will drive off some of the carbon dioxide (like shaking a bottle of club soda so it loses it's fizz), shift the balance of carbonic acid/bicarbonate to more bicarbonate in the water which will cause the pH to rise, and as a result actaually have less carbonate hardness, or alkainity (total amount of the carbonic acid/bicarbonate buffer), in the water. You have now lowered your alkalinity.
The reason that borax will raise pH without appreciable effect on alkalinity is that it introduces a second buffer system that consists of boric acid and borates.
Both sodium bicarbonate (baking soda) and sodium carbonate (pH up) will raise it but sodium carbonate has a higher pH and will also raise pH faster and higher than sodium bicarbonate. If you only want to raise pH without affecting the carbonate hardness or alkalinity then using borax is a better choice since it will have much less effect (although it will have some) on the carbonic acid/bicarbonate buffer system we all know as total alkalinity.
Hope this helps to clear things up.
to rephrase:
lowering your pH does not automatically lower the alkalinity...it increases the ratio of carbonic acid (carbon dioxide gas dissoved in the water) to bicarbonate ions but the total carbonate hardness or alkalinity is unchanged.
allowing the carbon dioxide gas to "gas off" while the pH is low will casue the pH to rise (becuase of the increase of bicarbonate ions to carbonic acid) and will leave you with less carbonate hardness, or alkalinity, in your water.
Last edited by waterbear; 05-01-2006 at 03:46 PM.
Retired pool store and commercial pool maintenance guy.
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