Hi tatu
Good post buddy
Damsel
Let me expand on tatu's post. Chemists often do not care about things like O but only things like N or P. Thus, they give P or N ppm values. It goes like this.
Nitrogen, oxygen and all elements have what we call molecular weight. The MW is the weight in grams of an element that equals a scientists dozen, which we call a mole. 1 mole of anything always has the same number of things, be it atoms, ions, molecules or even sand grains if you want. That number is 6.02 x 10^23 "things"
1 mole of N = 14 grams ( we round off these numbers to make it easier often)
1 mole of O = 16 grams
Nitrate = NO3, so 14 + 16 + 16 +16 =
62 grams for 1 mole of Nitrate
N-NO3, means we are measuring nitrate but are expressing it with only the weigh of N and leaving out the O has tatu has stated. So........
N =
14 grams for 1 mole
62 /
14 = 4.4 conversions
SO, 1 ppm NO3-N = 4.4 ppm NO3
This is why at time I ask if your kit is measuring Nitrate as Nitrate ion, NO3 or Nitrate -Nitrogen NO3-N.
The chem std is as Nitrate-Nitrogen but this hobby uses the Nitrate ion reading/expression mostly in kits.
If Bob says his nitrate is 0.2 ppm and Jim says his is 0.2 ppm also, they may not be the same. Jim's may really be .88 ppm ( 4.4 x 0.2). Jim has high nitrate for a reef tank whereas Bob's does not. We want to all be on the same page.