- Nov 17, 2023
- 61
- Pool Size
- 21500
- Surface
- Vinyl
- Chlorine
- Salt Water Generator
- SWG Type
- Hayward Aqua Rite (T-15)
In August I am having a pool put in, and I'm interested in trying to learn the fundamentals behind pool chemistry. I've been reading online about weak acids, buffers, and ions, and it sounds vaguely familiar from my college chemistry classes 10 years ago, but I'm hoping you smart pool people can correct me/fill in some gaps / explain it a little more for me. I've tried to lay out my understanding of the concepts in terms of "To accomplish A, we do B, but we need to account for C. To account for C we need to do D etc." Hopefully the formatting is somewhat understandable. I will edit this initial forum post as people make clarifications/corrections.
Hopefully someone enjoys responding to this. I've tried reading other articles on this topic, but they seem to be too dumb (CYA protects chlorine like sunblock) or too smart (academic papers I can't quite digest)
Questions
Q1: Where does alkalinity come into play? I think I read that you add Sodium Bicarbonate to form another buffer? I think this would come in after 4? If we stopped at 4, the pH would shift in such a way that the balance of Cl2 and HOCl, or dichloro-s-triazinetrione and HOCl would be off, and the HOCl would be "trapped" in the non-disinfecting compounds and not useful?
Hopefully someone enjoys responding to this. I've tried reading other articles on this topic, but they seem to be too dumb (CYA protects chlorine like sunblock) or too smart (academic papers I can't quite digest)
- To swim, add water to a pool
(If we stopped at 1, algae and bacteria from the environment would grow in the pool)
- To kill the algae and bacteria, introduce an excess of Hypochlorous acid (HOCl) and ClO-
(If we stopped at 2, any remaining HOCl) would be reacted away with water and sun's UV (H2O+HOCl+Sunlight = O2 +HCl)- Add Salt (NaCl) to water, which breaks down into Na+ and CL- ions
- Run salt water through SWCG which generates Hydrogen (H2), Sodium ions (Na+), and hydroxide ions (OH-), and Chlorine (Cl2)
- H2 bubbles out into atmosphere as a gas
- Na+ remains in the water
- OH- remain in the water
- Cl2 combines with water to form a balance of Cl2 and HOCl
- HOCl combines with water to form a balance of HOCl and ClO- and H+
- To protect the remaining HOCl acid from the sun's UV rays, convert the HOCl into sodium dichloro-s-triazinetrione, which does not break down from UV
(If we stopped at 4, eventually all of the HOCl and ClO- would be reacted away)- Add Cyauranic acid (C3H3N3O3), forming a balance of HOCl, C3H3N3O3 and sodium dichloro-s-triazinetrione.
- As the sun converts HOCl to O2 and HCl, or HOCl gets used to destroy algae/bacteria, the sodium dichloro-s-triazinetrione reverts back to HOCl to maintain its desired balance
- To keep an excess of HOCl and ClO- present, continually run the SWCG
Questions
Q1: Where does alkalinity come into play? I think I read that you add Sodium Bicarbonate to form another buffer? I think this would come in after 4? If we stopped at 4, the pH would shift in such a way that the balance of Cl2 and HOCl, or dichloro-s-triazinetrione and HOCl would be off, and the HOCl would be "trapped" in the non-disinfecting compounds and not useful?
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