|
03/05/2014, 12:38 AM | #1 |
Registered Member
Join Date: Mar 2014
Location: south west england
Posts: 292
|
calcium and carbonate buffer.
Hi!!. I have been keeping marine fish for 3.5 years and hard corals for 2.5 years.
as I understand it, if you add calcium and carbonate 2 part to a reef tank, then they should ballance each other out, as the hard corals take up calcium and carbonate in a balanced way. Some one once told me that calcium and carbonate buffer each other out, is this possible. I thought that the carbonate/alkalinity was the buffer, and calcium from a 2 part had no direct affect on the carbonate when added (asumming there is no precipitation). Or would it be possible to say that when you add carbonate/alkalinity to a tank, it buffers with the calcium already in the tank. Is calcium chloride from a 2 part P.H.7, and so does not buffer anything ?. I have read many articals by Randy Holmes Farley, but can find nothing to support this. (Randy's articals are very usfull!!) Many thanks to any one with a bit of chemisty knowlege |
03/05/2014, 08:11 AM | #2 |
-RT * ln(k)
Join Date: Sep 2010
Location: Little Rock
Posts: 9,705
|
The calcium chloride in the two part shouldn't have any great effect on pH.
I can't answer the rest because I'm not quite sure what you think the word buffer means.
__________________
David Current Tank: Undergoing reconstruction... |
03/05/2014, 09:51 AM | #3 |
Registered Member
Join Date: Mar 2014
Location: south west england
Posts: 292
|
Buffer
To me the word buffer is simply saying it buffers, or stops a p.h swing. So both would stop/buffer a swing of the other some how. But what it means to the person who said that "calcium buffers carbonate", I don't quite know!!!.
|
03/05/2014, 09:58 AM | #4 |
Registered Member
Join Date: Mar 2014
Location: south west england
Posts: 292
|
To me the word Buffer is somply saying it buffers or stops a P.H swing. So both would stop/buffer a swing of the other some how. But what it means to the person who said that "calcium buffers carbonate", I don't quite know.
Thanks for saying the calcium choride shouldn't affect the P.H, thats what I thought. |
03/05/2014, 10:42 AM | #5 |
-RT * ln(k)
Join Date: Sep 2010
Location: Little Rock
Posts: 9,705
|
Buffer in chemistry has a particular definition. It is a mixture of a weak acid or base with its conjugate. Solutions made this way are called buffers and they tend to resist changes in pH.
__________________
David Current Tank: Undergoing reconstruction... |
03/05/2014, 02:35 PM | #6 |
RC Mod
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Mountain View, CA, USA
Posts: 88,616
|
"Calcium buffers carbonate" makes no sense in any definition of the term "buffer".
__________________
Jonathan Bertoni |
03/05/2014, 06:47 PM | #7 |
Registered Member
Join Date: Mar 2014
Location: south west england
Posts: 292
|
Thank you so much for your reply. I couldn't understand myself how one could buffer the other, it would mean they would both have to be buffers!!.
|
03/05/2014, 09:06 PM | #8 |
ReefKeeping Mag staff
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: West Seneca NY
Posts: 27,691
|
The alkalinity buffers pH swings. The calcium does not and doesn't effect the carbonate alkalinity outside of precipitation as calcium carbonate.
__________________
Tom Current Tank Info: Tank of the Month , November 2011 : 600gal integrated system: 3 display tanks (120 g, 90g, 89g),several frag/grow out tanks, macroalgae refugia, cryptic zones. 40+ fish, seahorses, sps,lps,leathers, zoanthidae and non photosynthetic corals. |
03/05/2014, 11:10 PM | #9 |
Registered Member
Join Date: Mar 2014
Location: south west england
Posts: 292
|
Yes tanks. You clearly know what you are talking about!!.
|
Tags |
2 part, calcium, carbonate |
|
|