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Can I raise pH slightly (~0.2) and lower alk moderately (~1.5 dKH) simultaneously over period of about a week?
My alkalinity has been rising and I don't know why. In this thread, I described how my alk was dropping in a new tank. Probably due to precipitation into the sand and rock (thanks @Randy Holmes-Farley). I then dosed Nitrate to beat dinos and my alkalinity started rising. When it got too high, I switched to dosing ammonium chloride. This worked well for quite some time, but now my alkalinity is rising again. I don't have any corals with hard skeletons, only a few softies, and I'm not dosing anything except NH4Cl. I dropped the alk by lowering the alk of a water change with HCl (24 hours + bubbler to outgas CO2), but it has risen again. It's probably rising about 1 dKH/month.
It would be best to know why it's rising, but I can't figure it out. If you have ideas, I'd love to hear them.
My ultimate goal is to control the alk rise with corals but in order to do that I need to get the alk down so my DT matches my QT, which BTW is too low, so I'm trying to raise the QT alk at the same time.
I could do what I've done before and add HCl to water change water, but I only do water changes every 2 weeks, and I'd like to get it from 10 to 8.5 a little more quickly than 1-2 months, and my water changes are time-consuming so I'd rather not due several during a week. So my idea is to dose HCl directly to the display. I mean why not, I'm already dosing NH4Cl. I understand from Randy's article, "High pH: Causes and Cures", "that adding enough hydrochloric acid to reduce alkalinity by 0.5 meq/L (1.4 dKH) instantly dropped the pH from 8.10 to 6.91." I calculate that at pH 8.0, dosing 1.41 ml of 31.45% HCl to a 130 gal system will reduce alk by 0.086 dKH will lower pH by 0.05. (My dailiy rise and fall is about 0.1 pH.) This will lower my alk from 10 to 8.5 in about 3 weeks.
OK, so if this wasn't sufficiently crazy, I'm wondering if I could dose a higher amount of HCl and dose NaOH to keep the pH up. It would be the insanity trifecta!
But seriously...I know the risks are great. I need to be handling and tracking 3 hazardous chemicals. Aside from the risk, a) is my calculation about the effect of the HCl on pH correct, and b) is there some effect I'm missing that will render this moot or worse. One I'm not sure of is: will NaOH raise alkalinity in some other way than the steady-state equilibrium of alk, pH, and CO2?
Or is there a better way than the above or several water changes to raise pH and lower alkalinity over a period of about a week?
My alkalinity has been rising and I don't know why. In this thread, I described how my alk was dropping in a new tank. Probably due to precipitation into the sand and rock (thanks @Randy Holmes-Farley). I then dosed Nitrate to beat dinos and my alkalinity started rising. When it got too high, I switched to dosing ammonium chloride. This worked well for quite some time, but now my alkalinity is rising again. I don't have any corals with hard skeletons, only a few softies, and I'm not dosing anything except NH4Cl. I dropped the alk by lowering the alk of a water change with HCl (24 hours + bubbler to outgas CO2), but it has risen again. It's probably rising about 1 dKH/month.
It would be best to know why it's rising, but I can't figure it out. If you have ideas, I'd love to hear them.
My ultimate goal is to control the alk rise with corals but in order to do that I need to get the alk down so my DT matches my QT, which BTW is too low, so I'm trying to raise the QT alk at the same time.
I could do what I've done before and add HCl to water change water, but I only do water changes every 2 weeks, and I'd like to get it from 10 to 8.5 a little more quickly than 1-2 months, and my water changes are time-consuming so I'd rather not due several during a week. So my idea is to dose HCl directly to the display. I mean why not, I'm already dosing NH4Cl. I understand from Randy's article, "High pH: Causes and Cures", "that adding enough hydrochloric acid to reduce alkalinity by 0.5 meq/L (1.4 dKH) instantly dropped the pH from 8.10 to 6.91." I calculate that at pH 8.0, dosing 1.41 ml of 31.45% HCl to a 130 gal system will reduce alk by 0.086 dKH will lower pH by 0.05. (My dailiy rise and fall is about 0.1 pH.) This will lower my alk from 10 to 8.5 in about 3 weeks.
OK, so if this wasn't sufficiently crazy, I'm wondering if I could dose a higher amount of HCl and dose NaOH to keep the pH up. It would be the insanity trifecta!
But seriously...I know the risks are great. I need to be handling and tracking 3 hazardous chemicals. Aside from the risk, a) is my calculation about the effect of the HCl on pH correct, and b) is there some effect I'm missing that will render this moot or worse. One I'm not sure of is: will NaOH raise alkalinity in some other way than the steady-state equilibrium of alk, pH, and CO2?
Or is there a better way than the above or several water changes to raise pH and lower alkalinity over a period of about a week?