I had a much faster pH rise when my plaster started to form volcanoes (calcium nodules), drips, and delaminate so yes a poor plaster job that starts to release calcium hydroxide from under the plaster will have the pH, TA and CH all rise.
My gears are turning here, wondering why the op is getting such a persistent pH rise with no SWCG and long since cured plaster.
Could it possibly be somewhere in the plumbing that there occurs a high rate of turbulent water due to a minor constriction, or a wacky elbow setup, or tee, or even a reducer causing some sort of cavitating? Thus inducing a pH rise like one would see with a water feature, or SWCG.
Maybe a suction side leak that's sucking in air, cuasing aeration?
A possibly silly question, even though the plaster is only 15yrs old, if there were some sort of breakdown occurring, could this cause a pH increase? I'm thinking no, but worth a shot.![]()
Lastly, could some sort of "mystery chemical" still be present, in-spite of the partial drain and fills, causing pH to rise?
Just some ideas... puzzling indeed.
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I had a much faster pH rise when my plaster started to form volcanoes (calcium nodules), drips, and delaminate so yes a poor plaster job that starts to release calcium hydroxide from under the plaster will have the pH, TA and CH all rise.
If you are interested in the rate of carbon dioxide outgassing that leads to pH rise, then the carbonate (adjusted) alkalinity is what is relevant. If you are looking a pH buffering, in particular its capacity preventing a pH crash from pH getting lowered, then Total Alkalinity (TA) is what is relevant. There is no single magic TA level where your particular pool will slow down the pH rise to the point that is tolerable for you. There is a theoretical point where such pH rise, at least from carbon dioxide outgassing, will stop completely, but it's at an impractically low TA. In practice, the outgassing slows down considerably before that point.
Specifically, to stop the pH from rising you'd have to have the carbonate (adjusted) alkalinity down to the following levels at the pH indicated:
pH . Carb.Alk.
7.0 ....... 3.5
7.1 ....... 4.4
7.2 ....... 5.5
7.3 ....... 7
7.4 ....... 9
7.5 ..... 11
7.6 ..... 14
7.7 ..... 18
7.8 ..... 22
7.9 ..... 28
8.0 ..... 36
8.1 ..... 46
8.2 ..... 58
8.3 ..... 75
8.4 ..... 96
Fortunately such extremes are not needed in practice.
You can most readily distinguish pH rise from outgassing vs. from alkaline sources because when you add a strong acid to lower your pH, your TA will drop. With carbon dioxide outgassing there is no change in TA so you'll know if your pH rise is from carbon dioxide outgassing by seeing that the TA is dropping over time by the expected amount based on how much acid you are adding. That's the easiest way to tell. In your 22,000 gallon pool, one gallon of full-strength Muriatic Acid (31.45% Hydrochloric Acid) lowers the TA by 22.8 ppm.