Curtswearing
Mantisfreak
There are two articles in the library regarding this.
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Expanding the Limits of Limewater: Vinegar
Has anyone tried this? What would you say the biggest benefit or detriment was?
Kalkwasser in Depth (vinegar)Dissolving the Kalk powder in the Vinegar first will accomplish several very good things.
First, it will get more Calcium ions (Ca++) into the solution because you are dissolving the Ca(OH)2 in an acid instead of water, and forming Calcium Acetate, which exists as a dissociated equilibrium of free Calcium ions and Acetate ions.
Second, the Acetic Acid (Vinegar) provides an equivalent of all the CO2 you need to avoid precipitating the newly-added Calcium ions as useless white Calcium Carbonate powder.
Third, after all the cool Calcium ion chemistry is over, the leftover Acetate ions from the broken-down Vinegar leaves you with free organic Carbon in the water that feeds the bacteria in your tank so that it converts more poisonous Nitrates to NO2 gas (a very good thing).
Adding Vinegar in Kalkwasser is one of the few win-win situations for reefers -- it has a great up side and I've yet to encounter a down side to doing it. I don't know why so few reefers do it -- lack of understanding of the chemistry behind it maybe -- but a lot more are starting now that some respected reef writers have discovered it and have recommended it and even written up detailed instructions for it.
By the way, you should check your pH before and after you do this the first few times to make sure it is not affected by the process. It should not be a problem. Also, if you don't already have them, get and learn to use Salifert test kits for Calcium, Alkalinity, and Magnesium. The levels of all of these are related and affected by dripping Kalk.
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There is no reason to use anything other than white vinegar (made for human consumption) for this purpose. You can buy pure acetic acid from chemical supply stores, but a source of “Food Chemical Codex†(FCC) grade acetic acid is as close as your local grocery store. I doubt your corals want cider, balsamic or herb-flavored vinegars either. Just plain old white vinegar should do very nicely and is what I’ve been using.
Even starting at one quarter the maximum dosage, which I’m suggesting you try first, the concentration of calcium in this spiked limewater will be about 9 percent higher than in unspiked limewater. The pH of all of these mixtures will also be somewhat lower than a pure solution of calcium hydroxide in water. And you really should make saturated solutions when you do this, and perhaps check the pH of the solution as well, to make sure it isn’t very low.
Expanding the Limits of Limewater: Vinegar
Has anyone tried this? What would you say the biggest benefit or detriment was?
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