Do you think it’s helpful to send a sample of it for ICP? Would it help determine if that’s the cause of my accumulating sulfate?Sulfate should be the third highest ingredient in it after magnesium and chloride.
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Do you think it’s helpful to send a sample of it for ICP? Would it help determine if that’s the cause of my accumulating sulfate?Sulfate should be the third highest ingredient in it after magnesium and chloride.
I think safe to assume it’s added directly to the tank though technically I’ve mostly done it by pulling out a bucket of tank water (4 gallons) and adding the sodium bisulfate with aeration until pH stabilizes, then adding that bucket back to the tank.It is added directly to the tank or to new salt water?
Do you think it’s helpful to send a sample of it for ICP? Would it help determine if that’s the cause of my accumulating sulfate?
Well, it could, yes. It will require some data analysis on the answer to know if it is right or not.
@Christoph
Christoph, if Miami wanted to determine sulfate and a couple other ions (say, magnesium and potassium) how would you suggest he go about it starting from Balling Part C solids?
Price?Good question, Randy!
Please never send such "special" samples as standard Seawater samples, since this might cause significant isues in the lab.
It would be possible to dissolve ~ 2 g of the raw salt in 1 l of high purity RO. We could than measure just IC and would have access to Na, K, Mg, Ca, F, Cl, NO3, NO2, SO4, Br - i guess that would be sufficient in this case.
BR, Christoph
The magnesium sulfate is now a dried form which means you can use less, it dissolves a ton easier and when mixed with magnesium chloride it no longer turns into a rock because there is minimal moisture for the mag chloride to pull out of the mag sulfate. This one is probably less expensive now because you use less.