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if the area between the bacterium and the GFO is acidic to release phosphate, then more phosphate will not bind. The kinetics of getting the phosphate from the water then under the bacterium to the GFO is also problematic.
I believe this is why the GFO enriched biopellets have to be tumbled so vigorously, it causes the surface of the pearl (as it degrades) to break apart and chunks of bacteria to disloge and be removed by the skimmer. This then exposes fresh sites to waterflow.
after a while the existing pellets start to look a bit like swiss cheese.
I don’t dispute that dislodging bacteria from any media requires significant tumbling, and that may help expose new GFO. I do not believe the GFO in such combo products increase bioavailability of phosphate to bacteria, which was the point I was addressing.
I’m not convinced that GFO needs to be removed at all to lower phosphate. Phosphate will bind and largely stay bound even it it just sits in the tank.understood,
Do you think that the increased phosphate removal in my systems I’ve noticed could just be due to the mechanical removal as the particulate gfo gets removed via filtration?