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- Nov 26, 2017
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Hi Reef2Reef, I've been dosing my tank according to Randy's two part recipe for a few months. The first time I made the calcium solution, after a few hours a little white powder had precipitated on the bottom. Yesterday I made a new batch and made sure in the bucket that all the calcium chloride had dissolved but the same thing happened again and now I see a little white powder on the bottom. Is this normal?
(long story)
I'm wondering if I did something wrong. I use Kent TurboCalcium (anhydrous calcium chloride). The recipe says, dissolve 500 grams of calcium chloride dihydrate to make 1 gallon total volume. If you use anhydrous calcium chloride you should use about 20% less solid calcium chloride by volume. The problem was that I didn't know the precise volume of calcium chloride dihydrate (Dowflake) necessary, so I wasn't sure what volume of Kent TurboCalcium I should use. So I tried calculating the necessary weight. Time to go back to high school ...
The Alkalinity part uses 594 grams (7.07mol) sodium bicarbonate. When it is baked in Recipe #1, the chemical reaction
2NaHCO3 → Na2CO3 + H2O + CO2
should take place, so this yields 7.07/2 = 3.535 mol sodium carbonate.
As I should use 3.535 mol anhydrous calcium chloride (111g/mol), I need 111*3.535 = 392 grams per gallon solution.
I actually use 2L (0.528 gal) containers, so I instead used 392*0.528 = 207 grams of Kent TurboCalcium. The calcium chloride seems to dissolve while being stirred, getting hot even though I do it little by little, and after a few hours a little white powder precipitates on the bottom of the container.
Is this fine to use, or should I try adding less Kent TurboCalcium next time? Thanks!
(long story)
I'm wondering if I did something wrong. I use Kent TurboCalcium (anhydrous calcium chloride). The recipe says, dissolve 500 grams of calcium chloride dihydrate to make 1 gallon total volume. If you use anhydrous calcium chloride you should use about 20% less solid calcium chloride by volume. The problem was that I didn't know the precise volume of calcium chloride dihydrate (Dowflake) necessary, so I wasn't sure what volume of Kent TurboCalcium I should use. So I tried calculating the necessary weight. Time to go back to high school ...
The Alkalinity part uses 594 grams (7.07mol) sodium bicarbonate. When it is baked in Recipe #1, the chemical reaction
2NaHCO3 → Na2CO3 + H2O + CO2
should take place, so this yields 7.07/2 = 3.535 mol sodium carbonate.
As I should use 3.535 mol anhydrous calcium chloride (111g/mol), I need 111*3.535 = 392 grams per gallon solution.
I actually use 2L (0.528 gal) containers, so I instead used 392*0.528 = 207 grams of Kent TurboCalcium. The calcium chloride seems to dissolve while being stirred, getting hot even though I do it little by little, and after a few hours a little white powder precipitates on the bottom of the container.
Is this fine to use, or should I try adding less Kent TurboCalcium next time? Thanks!