pH non-existant/alkalinity?

DeeDee

0
Jun 11, 2013
28
Houston, TX
pH - Bright yellow TA - ?
FC - 7.5
CYA - 42
CH - 375
I went away for Christmas and filled my chlorine dispenser with too much chlorine. When I returned 3 weeks later, the chlorine was sky high. I turned it off and it has come down, but when I test the TA, it turns bright red immediately (never green) and the pH is bright yellow. I'm now running the pump and bubblers to aerate, but I'm confused as to what else I should do. Btw, I do use the Taylor testing kit that you recommend.
 
Aeration doesn't raise pH in the absence of TA, the pucks crashed your pH and TA and the water is now about as acidic as vinegar.

Definitely follow JamesW's advice ASAP. Acidic water is bad on just about everything, especially pool surfaces.
 

Enjoying this content?

Support TFP with a donation.

Give Support
25 pounds will raise the TA by 75 ppm.

The TA started at - 65, so adding 25 pounds increased the TA from -65 to 10.

Adding 20 pounds should result in a TA increase of about 60 ppm or a new TA of about 70.

The pH will be out of the danger zone.
This is the issue.

Why add hydrogen when pH is already saturated with hydrogen? The baking soda wont work as expected in 0 TA. Add soda ash to take up some hydrogen and then baking soda will work.
 
HCO3- + H+ --> H2CO3 --> H2O + CO2

The bicarbonate converts into carbon dioxide like this and the pH rises because you are removing free hydrogen ions.

The carbon dioxide offgasses and is lost.

The amount of carbon dioxide created determines the rate of pH rise.

The amount of carbon dioxide depends on the pH and the TA.

There is always a specific percentage of the TA that turns into carbon dioxide.

pH....................%CO2
7.0........................18.292
7.1........................15.097
7.2........................12.377
7.3........................10.088
7.4........................8.183
7.5........................6.611
7.6........................5.324
7.7........................4.275
7.8........................3.426
7.9........................2.741
8.0........................2.189
8.1........................1.747
8.2........................1.392
8.3........................1.109

You can use the formulas to calculate the percentage of bicarbonate vs. carbon dioxide or carbon dioxide vs. bicarbonate.

100÷(1+10^(6.35 – 8.3)) = 98.890% bicarbonate vs. carbon dioxide.

100-(100÷(1+10^(6.35 – 8.3))) = 1.109% carbon dioxide vs. bicarbonate.

1706130704848.png

1706130737528.png


 
  • Like
Reactions: proavia
As you can see, the baking soda converts into carbon dioxide quite a bit when the pH is low and this raises the pH.

The effect automatically slows down as the pH rises and this make the process much safer than using sodium carbonate, which can cause scaling and clouding.

pH............%CO2
4.0..............99.555
4.5..............98.607
5.0..............95.724
5.5..............87.6229
6.0..............69.1236
6.35...........50.000
6.5..............41.45
7.0..............18.292
7.5.............6.6114

1706131532440.png
 
  • Like
Reactions: proavia
CO32- + 2H+ --> H2CO3 --> H2O + CO2.

For carbonate, it picks up 2 hydrogens, but it still results in the same thing.

The risk is an excessive pH locally and the carbonate can combine with calcium to form calcium carbonate clouding.

CO32- + Ca2+ --> CaCO3

Carbonate plus calcium = calcium carbonate.
 

Enjoying this content?

Support TFP with a donation.

Give Support
Thread Status
Hello , This thread has been inactive for over 60 days. New postings here are unlikely to be seen or responded to by other members. For better visibility, consider Starting A New Thread.