I have been experimenting with my pool, probably more than I should. Recently, I let the PH go below 7, which was a big mistake. I mobilized a lot of previously plated copper on my pebbletec. Bringing the pH above 87 caused much of the copper to replate on the pebbletec. I am not using a sequestrant, and probably do not want to start. In doingk all of this, some of the copper or compouds of copeper stayed in solution. My water sent green with the addition of liquid chlorine. By adding ascoric acid, I got it to turn a beautiful blue - very beautiful actually. And, it was very sparkling clear. No algae is present on the walls at this time.
My pool is 14 years old and I had previously used copper algecides, so I am not surprised that I have lots of uniform copper staining. I read lots of posts, and I think I know what is going onj pretty well and I think that I know what to do to at least temporarily deal with it with sequestrants. Anyway, I am posting in the deep end to get some insight into this issue for purposes of discussion and understanding. I downloaded a really good solubility graph for the solubility of copper in water. vs. pH At about pH of 7, up to about 1 PPM or so of copper can be dissolved in the pool water. At about pH 8, very, very little can be dissolved. Being in San Diego and being with a SWG the pH almost always climbs up and I think that the dissolved copper will drop our of solution and again just get "plated" onto the pebbletec.
I started to use the large size Culator to see if it would take the dissolved copper out. I think that it did take it out, even at pH of about 7.2, based on the LaMotte copper test kit I purchased. I still have lots of "plated" copper on the pebbletec. If I keep adding acid (ascoribic acid), I can again get the copper to dissolve and I think that the Culator can then remove it again. The pH will no doubt go up, and I will have to constantly repeat this cycle. I do not now how may times I need to do this, or how may Culators I may need to purcahse to remove the vast majority of all of the copper. So, I am curious if anyone has any idea of just how may ounces/grams/pounds of copper may actually be adsorbed onto a pebbletec surface. When I recently drained my spa, I could see uniform staining on the pebbletec, so I am guessing that there may be a lot, but I am not really sure. Again, I know that I can add sequestrant to hide the problem, but am curious just how much copper I may be looking at removing if I stay with my plan to remove it with Culators. I could just add a lot of ascorbic acid and then drain the pool, but San Diego water is expensive as I have stated in some of my prior posts, and I, or course, like to tinker so that draining the pool would not satisfy my curiosity. Also, I checked the copper content from my kitchen tap, and it was about 0.4 ppm or so based on the LaMotte test, so I may not actually fix the issue with a drain and refill. Hopefully, I have not confused everyone with this one. Any comments would be appreciated. Thanks,
Del
26,500 gallon pool/swim spa (Spa part is 3300 gallons)
pebbletec finish
14 years old
SWG
DE Quad Four Filter
Waterfall waterfeature
Vanishing Edge with pump
Submerged Surge tank for vanishing edge
Currently Zero ppm copper and iron in the water
Visible copper stains
Confirmed copper in water prior to Culator
about 140 CYA
About 600 CH
Zero free or combined chlorine with DPD test
Pentair Intelliflo (1) for main filtration
Whisperflos (3) for various waterfeatures
My pool is 14 years old and I had previously used copper algecides, so I am not surprised that I have lots of uniform copper staining. I read lots of posts, and I think I know what is going onj pretty well and I think that I know what to do to at least temporarily deal with it with sequestrants. Anyway, I am posting in the deep end to get some insight into this issue for purposes of discussion and understanding. I downloaded a really good solubility graph for the solubility of copper in water. vs. pH At about pH of 7, up to about 1 PPM or so of copper can be dissolved in the pool water. At about pH 8, very, very little can be dissolved. Being in San Diego and being with a SWG the pH almost always climbs up and I think that the dissolved copper will drop our of solution and again just get "plated" onto the pebbletec.
I started to use the large size Culator to see if it would take the dissolved copper out. I think that it did take it out, even at pH of about 7.2, based on the LaMotte copper test kit I purchased. I still have lots of "plated" copper on the pebbletec. If I keep adding acid (ascoribic acid), I can again get the copper to dissolve and I think that the Culator can then remove it again. The pH will no doubt go up, and I will have to constantly repeat this cycle. I do not now how may times I need to do this, or how may Culators I may need to purcahse to remove the vast majority of all of the copper. So, I am curious if anyone has any idea of just how may ounces/grams/pounds of copper may actually be adsorbed onto a pebbletec surface. When I recently drained my spa, I could see uniform staining on the pebbletec, so I am guessing that there may be a lot, but I am not really sure. Again, I know that I can add sequestrant to hide the problem, but am curious just how much copper I may be looking at removing if I stay with my plan to remove it with Culators. I could just add a lot of ascorbic acid and then drain the pool, but San Diego water is expensive as I have stated in some of my prior posts, and I, or course, like to tinker so that draining the pool would not satisfy my curiosity. Also, I checked the copper content from my kitchen tap, and it was about 0.4 ppm or so based on the LaMotte test, so I may not actually fix the issue with a drain and refill. Hopefully, I have not confused everyone with this one. Any comments would be appreciated. Thanks,
Del
26,500 gallon pool/swim spa (Spa part is 3300 gallons)
pebbletec finish
14 years old
SWG
DE Quad Four Filter
Waterfall waterfeature
Vanishing Edge with pump
Submerged Surge tank for vanishing edge
Currently Zero ppm copper and iron in the water
Visible copper stains
Confirmed copper in water prior to Culator
about 140 CYA
About 600 CH
Zero free or combined chlorine with DPD test
Pentair Intelliflo (1) for main filtration
Whisperflos (3) for various waterfeatures