Why not diffuse Air?

To elaborate on Star Rider's comments.

Diffusing air into an aquarium will (depending on temperature, altitude, etc) result in approximately 3ppm of CO2 and 5 to 8 ppm of O2. Pumping air through faster would only result in the water reaching this equilibrium faster. We attempt to reduce surface agitation in CO2 supplemented tanks in order to slow the outflow of excess CO2 in the water. And essentially adding an air diffuser is just adding more surface area (and a turbulent one).

In a "high tech" tank (with plants normally pearling) your O2 is quite likely already above normal equilibrium levels. Running air through a second diffuser will only reduce CO2 and O2 levels as the excess gasses bleed into the air you're diffusing through them. The level of gasses in water are always going to move towards being equal to that in the atmosphere.

Running an air pump at night is easier on the fish not because it increases O2 (which in most cases its probably reducing it in a planted tank) but because it reduces the level of CO2 in the water. The amount of O2 and CO2 in the water (within reason) is not as important as the ratio of the two.
 
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but wouldnt o2 going into the reactor raise o2 in the tank? and i thought that i read that co2 doesnt displace o2. so why would it cause my water to offgas co2?

and wouldnt more o2 at night be better for plants?
 
but wouldnt o2 going into the reactor raise o2 in the tank?

Not if the level in the tank is higher then that in the air (I assume we are not discussing pumping pure O2 into the water). The gasses move to where the concentration is lower. Think of it this way, instead of using a diffuser just increase surface turbulence, in both cases your increasing the amount of air, water mixture.

and i thought that i read that co2 doesnt displace o2. so why would it cause my water to offgas co2?

Your right but extra O2 isn't causing it to offgas. The answer remains the same as your first question. The CO2 is moving to the air where the concentration is lower. Think of it just like osmosis.

and wouldnt more o2 at night be better for plants?

Plants need O2 at night, you are correct but plants are net producers of O2 meaning they produce more O2 then they consume. This is why high growth heavily planted tanks have higher O2 levels then then any other type of tanks (at all points of the day). People run into problems because they're CO2 levels are so high compared to O2 levels that the fish can't rid they're bodies of the CO2 in their blood. (Osmosis again).

Curious piece of natural history. Did you know, the first major extinction event was caused by all the extra O2 that plants (algae) pumped into the environment.
 
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Jpappy definately brought up a very good point! Diffusing high concentrations of atm air into an aquarium would in fact give your fish 'the bends'. I can't believe I didn't think about the N2 Problem...

Actually, thinking about it more... the N2 bubbles shouldn't form unless the fish experience a reduction in water pressure. [N2] in the blood would be higher, but in solution, and in eq - This shouldn't be a problem. The reason it's a problem with divers isn't the higher [N2] in the blood, it's the N2 bubbles that form on rapid decompression. W/o decompression, the bubbles shouldn't form...
 
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good post to elaborate canuck..well said.

hebily, n2 as a gas forms bubbles just as other gasses. bends are cause by too rapid of an ascent where the gas expands too fast to escape and are trapped in the blood vessels or you exceed your total bottom time... remember that at 33 ' you are at 1 atm and gasses compress by half the volume for every 33 ' you descend.

bottom time for divers is based on how fast the body absorbs these gasses over a priod of time..too long and you will need a decomp stop to allow the gas to escape in essence.. too long bottom time and you have absorbed too much gas.

the reverse happens when you ascend..the gas doubles in volume every 33' you ascend.. the idea is to ascend slow enough to allow most of the N2 to escape the blood stream(diffuse)
in a nutshell anyway. ;)

btw if you ever fish deep water and bring up a fish really fast you can see the effect on the fishes bladder.
 
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