Will someone please explain the relationship between nitrate levels and Alk. My Nitrate run 10-25. When I reload by biopellets the nitrates drop and I get an Alk spike which invariably my corals do not like.
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So when I add pellets and the population of bacteria within the reactor increases and thus comsumes the nitrates this gives back the alk that was consumed when the ammonia was nitrified. Is there any way to predict the amount of alk rise. So that I can dial back on my dosing pump?
Still trying to get my head wrapped around this here.There is no "direct" relationship.
The conversion of ammonia to nitrate depletes alkalinity, so if nitrate is rising, then alkalinity can be depleted by this process.
The consumption of nitrate by any process (except a water change) gives back the exact amount of alkalinity when it was made. So if nitrate is declining, that process will add to alkalinity.
So if nitrate is steady, and is coming from ammonia, then it should not impact the alkalinity.
If you are dosing nitrate that is being consumed, that is effectively boosting alkalinity a small amount.
Awesome sir thank you for all your help on this topic!any normal alk test, such as Salifert, that you are using for the aquarium can be used in Ro/di. I’m not 100% sure on the Hanna, but I’d try it and think it is ok.
Yes:
For each ammonia molecule converted into nitrate, one hydrogen ion (H+) is produced. If nitrate is allowed to accumulate to 50 ppm, the addition of this acid will deplete 0.8 meq/L (2.3 dKH) of alkalinity.
The exact same value will be true in reverse (e.g., 50 ppm nitrate consumed by bacteria on biopellets).
I discuss such issues here:
When Do Calcium and Alkalinity Demand Not Exactly Balance? by Randy Holmes-Farley - Reefkeeping.com
http://reefkeeping.com/issues/2004-12/rhf/index.htm
If this isnt pinned already it should be. Ton of valuable info..