I'm a lttle confused about my water chemistry at the moment.
As I understand it, in very simplified form, ph refers to the acidity of the water. 7.0 being neutral with lower being acidic and higher being alkaline.
kh and gh refer to the hardness of the water. GH refers to the total amount of salts or minerals in the water (including metals which can affect total hardness). Kh refers only to the amount of carbon in the water.
Now, I know KH acts as a buffer to protect the water from sudden changes in ph. A higher KH should mean its harder to get a ph drop in your water. A lower KH would mean you're more susceptible to a crash. A low KH is generally coupled with a low ph and vise versa.
This is what I THINK I know in generalized terms.
The problem is, I finally got a KH test kit and became confused. My tank tests for 30 mg/l with both GH and KH. This is pretty low so my thought would be that I should have a pretty low ph, right? Wrong. My ph is 7.2.
Its worth noting that before I started doing all my water changes with cold water that ran for at least 3-5 minutes before being collected my tanks tested for 50 mg/l GH.
The question is, how can I have such a low kh and gh yet still have slightly alkaline water (not that I'm complaining! 7.2 is ducky with me)?
Also, I am planning on adding the little Hagen CO2 kit to the 29 gallon tank once I put the 55w PC on. Since this would introduce more carbon to the water, would this increase my buffer? If not, how would it affect my water.
I never was this bad at chemistry in high school
:shake:
Tom
As I understand it, in very simplified form, ph refers to the acidity of the water. 7.0 being neutral with lower being acidic and higher being alkaline.
kh and gh refer to the hardness of the water. GH refers to the total amount of salts or minerals in the water (including metals which can affect total hardness). Kh refers only to the amount of carbon in the water.
Now, I know KH acts as a buffer to protect the water from sudden changes in ph. A higher KH should mean its harder to get a ph drop in your water. A lower KH would mean you're more susceptible to a crash. A low KH is generally coupled with a low ph and vise versa.
This is what I THINK I know in generalized terms.
The problem is, I finally got a KH test kit and became confused. My tank tests for 30 mg/l with both GH and KH. This is pretty low so my thought would be that I should have a pretty low ph, right? Wrong. My ph is 7.2.
Its worth noting that before I started doing all my water changes with cold water that ran for at least 3-5 minutes before being collected my tanks tested for 50 mg/l GH.
The question is, how can I have such a low kh and gh yet still have slightly alkaline water (not that I'm complaining! 7.2 is ducky with me)?
Also, I am planning on adding the little Hagen CO2 kit to the 29 gallon tank once I put the 55w PC on. Since this would introduce more carbon to the water, would this increase my buffer? If not, how would it affect my water.
I never was this bad at chemistry in high school
:shake:
Tom