no, alkalinity is NOT KH. Alkalinity is not the same as hardness. Calcium (Ca++) and Magnesium (Mg++) are primarily responsible for hardness. However, in most waters, alkalinity and hardness have similar values because the carbonates and bicarbonates responsible for total alkalinity are usually in the form of Calcium carbonate or Magnesium carbonate. However, waters with high total alkalinity are not always hard, since the carbonates can be in the form of Sodium or Potassium carbonate.
The equation below shows that carbonic acid (H2CO3) dissociates into hydrogen (H+) and bicarbonate (HCO3-) ions. The bicarbonate ions can further dissociate into hydrogen (H+) and carbonate (CO3-) ions. When acid (H+) is introduced into well-buffered water, carbonate ions react with the hydrogen ions to produce bicarbonate. Thus, although acid is added, no change in the overall pH occurs. Furthermore, bicarbonate ions act as an additional reservoir for hydrogen ions. The reactions outlined in the equation below are pH sensitive and shift to the right as pH increases.
H2O + CO2 <=> H2CO3 <=> H+ HCO3- <=> 2H+ + CO3
water + carbon dioxide <=> carbonic acid <=> hydrogen ion + bicarbonate <=> hydrogen + carbonate
The units used to measure alkalinity will depend on the test kit. Some use milliequivalents (meq/L), dKH (German Degrees), mg/L or parts per million (ppm). Meq/L stands for milliequivalents per litre. A milliequivalent is 0.001 of an Equivalent, which is the weight of substance that will react with one atomic weight of hydrogen.