Re: Tapwater Dechlorinators

Originally Posted by
RonWill

Originally Posted by
whuntley
BTW, I never use any of the "slime-coat" snake-oils. They are generally worthless or harmful and avoiding ammonia exposure is far, far more important, IMO.
Wright, I know someone embarking on DIYing their own solution to chloramine-treated tapwater.
The shopping list was for;
Sodium phosphate dibasic
Potassium phosphate monobasic
Sodium thiosulphate
snip...
I'm chemistry-handicapped and in this case, only the 'errand-boy', but curiousity never fail to get the better of me... will these 'stuff' work?
Probably not. It will create enough of a chemical soup to cause other problems, IMHO. As a chemist, I'm a pretty good electrical engineer.
It will surely kill or sicken fish in very soft water, tho. The phosphates will render the burst of ammonium harmless if they can overcome buffering and drop pH to 7 or below, but they may help create an algae bloom in some conditions.
The products effective at sequestering the ammonium, properly, are all formaldehyde-related organic compounds. That's why they kill inverts like hydra and infusoria.
"Prime" isn't too expensive, and even "Amquel" is reasonable, here, if bought in bulk. If you need huge amounts, you should be line-filtering with activated carbon, anyway, which is cheap.
Wright
01 760 872-3995
805 Valley West Circle
Bishop, CA 93514 USA
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