- May 27, 2019
- 1,624
- Pool Size
- 25000
- Surface
- Plaster
- Chlorine
- Salt Water Generator
- SWG Type
- Hayward Aqua Rite Pro (T-15)
Fire retardant underwear is now on!
Being an engineer (with a minor in Chemistry) and a computer geek even longer. I decided to look at the sensitivity of the chlorine loss to CYA. I need to download the CHEM GEEK spreadsheets, not to mention get a 1/2 life Excel function, and do a build up from there. But in the meantime, I'm using the CYA half-life charts and an on-line 1/2 life calculator.
One of my "hats" is a solar professional. I know more than a bit about calculating incoming solar radiation and the effect of off angle sun absorption. Thinking of the pool as a big solar collector that is fixed and flat, I take half-life numbers as if on the equator at solar noon. I ran hourly numbers for solar strength. I then used this to adjust the half-life each hour. For the most part, once you get under 5 ppm, the half-life doesn't change that much.
I used 6 ppm FC, since this is what I raise my chlorine to each night and I have a feel for my losses. I ran the calcs using 30 ppm CYA, again this is my pool, adjusting the half life based on the off-angle of the sun over 13 hours (specifically for August 5th). The final number is about 2.4 ppm FC or a loss of 3.6 ppm over the 13 hours I have sun on my pool. This matches fairly close on a full day of sun, no clouds, on my pool (2.8 ppm FC for a loss of 3.2 ppm). I'd attribute this to the humidity/haze in Houston blocking some of the UV and my pool sail shade.
I re-ran the numbers using 6 ppm FC, but with 40 CYA. The difference was less than 5% lower chlorine loss. I re-ran the numbers at 20 CYA and the chlorine loss was only 8.8% more than 30 CYA. It looks like there is little Chlorine savings with CYA over 30 PPM.
Flame away!
Being an engineer (with a minor in Chemistry) and a computer geek even longer. I decided to look at the sensitivity of the chlorine loss to CYA. I need to download the CHEM GEEK spreadsheets, not to mention get a 1/2 life Excel function, and do a build up from there. But in the meantime, I'm using the CYA half-life charts and an on-line 1/2 life calculator.
One of my "hats" is a solar professional. I know more than a bit about calculating incoming solar radiation and the effect of off angle sun absorption. Thinking of the pool as a big solar collector that is fixed and flat, I take half-life numbers as if on the equator at solar noon. I ran hourly numbers for solar strength. I then used this to adjust the half-life each hour. For the most part, once you get under 5 ppm, the half-life doesn't change that much.
I used 6 ppm FC, since this is what I raise my chlorine to each night and I have a feel for my losses. I ran the calcs using 30 ppm CYA, again this is my pool, adjusting the half life based on the off-angle of the sun over 13 hours (specifically for August 5th). The final number is about 2.4 ppm FC or a loss of 3.6 ppm over the 13 hours I have sun on my pool. This matches fairly close on a full day of sun, no clouds, on my pool (2.8 ppm FC for a loss of 3.2 ppm). I'd attribute this to the humidity/haze in Houston blocking some of the UV and my pool sail shade.
I re-ran the numbers using 6 ppm FC, but with 40 CYA. The difference was less than 5% lower chlorine loss. I re-ran the numbers at 20 CYA and the chlorine loss was only 8.8% more than 30 CYA. It looks like there is little Chlorine savings with CYA over 30 PPM.
Flame away!
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