Hi everyone, I've been working on an acetate-based solution to simplify my reef supplementation over the past few weeks and would love some input (especially by Randy).
Background
I've made a solution containing 1 molar calcium acetate, 0.1 molar magnesium acetate, and trace strontium, barium, Iron, manganese, copper, zinc, chromium, nickel, cobalt, iodide, potassium, bromide, fluoride. The idea was to supplement everything I thought was important in one concentrated solution as to simplify my system in the long run. As so far, there are no issues with precipitation and everything seems to hold as it should which is great. I have a couple of ICP tests to run to confirm the trace element stability and I imagine this should be okay too.
The issues
There is always a trade-off to any method we use and the big one here is the amount of carbon I inject into the tank. Acetate is this carbon source. As acetate is essentially only 2 enzymatic steps away from being fed directly into the citric acid cycle, there is a very quick metabolic response. This is great if you have an overstocked tank and need significant nitrate reduction, but in my tank, this caused a nitrate crash and bacterial bloom after 7 days. To clean the tank up I've stepped my ozone injection up and added a flocculant to remove excess free-floating bacteria through polyester wool and the protein skimmer. Additionally, I have not started dosing calcium nitrate to bring the tank back up to 2.5 ppm and would eventually like to stabilise this at 5 ppm (I would usually prefer potassium nitrate, but this is what I had in the house at the time). I have a 600L tank filled with SPS and expensive LPS so it is important I don't make too many mistakes going forward.
Questions
1) Do you think I should add nitrate directly to my dosing solution and balance N to C according to something like the Redfield ratio? Ideally this would prevent bottoming out in the future.
2) Are there any phosphorus sources I could also add to prevent a potential bottom out? Adding something like potassium phosphate will likely precipitate out calcium phosphate so I don't think that's an option.
3) How bad would it be to swap the magnesium acetate for magnesium sulphate? Perhaps this will reduce bacteria growth a little bit, although we are only dealing with a 10th of the carbon source I think the issue is excess carbon. Alternatively, I could do a 50/50 mix etc.
4) Is my method doomed to fail regardless? I think this can work with the right filtration and it could be just something that some tanks have issues with while others don't experience the same problems.
Any suggestions would be great!
Background
I've made a solution containing 1 molar calcium acetate, 0.1 molar magnesium acetate, and trace strontium, barium, Iron, manganese, copper, zinc, chromium, nickel, cobalt, iodide, potassium, bromide, fluoride. The idea was to supplement everything I thought was important in one concentrated solution as to simplify my system in the long run. As so far, there are no issues with precipitation and everything seems to hold as it should which is great. I have a couple of ICP tests to run to confirm the trace element stability and I imagine this should be okay too.
The issues
There is always a trade-off to any method we use and the big one here is the amount of carbon I inject into the tank. Acetate is this carbon source. As acetate is essentially only 2 enzymatic steps away from being fed directly into the citric acid cycle, there is a very quick metabolic response. This is great if you have an overstocked tank and need significant nitrate reduction, but in my tank, this caused a nitrate crash and bacterial bloom after 7 days. To clean the tank up I've stepped my ozone injection up and added a flocculant to remove excess free-floating bacteria through polyester wool and the protein skimmer. Additionally, I have not started dosing calcium nitrate to bring the tank back up to 2.5 ppm and would eventually like to stabilise this at 5 ppm (I would usually prefer potassium nitrate, but this is what I had in the house at the time). I have a 600L tank filled with SPS and expensive LPS so it is important I don't make too many mistakes going forward.
Questions
1) Do you think I should add nitrate directly to my dosing solution and balance N to C according to something like the Redfield ratio? Ideally this would prevent bottoming out in the future.
2) Are there any phosphorus sources I could also add to prevent a potential bottom out? Adding something like potassium phosphate will likely precipitate out calcium phosphate so I don't think that's an option.
3) How bad would it be to swap the magnesium acetate for magnesium sulphate? Perhaps this will reduce bacteria growth a little bit, although we are only dealing with a 10th of the carbon source I think the issue is excess carbon. Alternatively, I could do a 50/50 mix etc.
4) Is my method doomed to fail regardless? I think this can work with the right filtration and it could be just something that some tanks have issues with while others don't experience the same problems.
Any suggestions would be great!
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