zozo
Member
Does adding any acid to any any base not result in a reaction that produces co2?
If the water contains a buffer it does.. Afaik for us that would be Carbonates and Phosphates that buffers acids.. But the CO2 produced by this process anything above natural equilibrium will gass off into the atmosphere. Now i do not now if water with lower pH has a higher natural CO2 equilibrium. It likely is related to its kH value.
Iexperiemnted some time with acids with growing crops in the garden.. After reading about beter ion exchange in slightly acidic invironment and this can be achieved by lowering the fert solution pH before you add it. And or also use peat etc. mixed into the soil to lowet it's pH will result in beter producing crop. 🙂
For watering terrestrial plants you can go as low as pH 5 with the fert solution..
I also noticed if you leave the readily mixed pH 5 fert solution stand for 24 hours it simply raised back to +/- pH 7 again.. Than if i tried to lower that again with adding some more acid the party started with the pH+ solution. I never measured kH in those days, but i guess it alters with adding acids, because after adding it again after 24 hours buffering it rapidly and drasticaly crashed bellow pH5 with adding much less acid after that. By experience you learn for example 10 litre fert solution needs x amount of acid to lower it's pH 8 to a certain point. But once it has all buffered and raised again this amount changes drasticaly. If this buffering and raising again id solely a carbonate/phospate reaction with producing co2 that gasses off i don't know, i doubt that because of the crashes i experienced.
I should actualy know why i red it dozens of times, but somehow i can't make my brain repeat the excact procedure and formulas.
But bottom line, knowing why is fun but not a need to know. Just knowing this risk is enough not to play with acidic stuf in a fish tank. 🙂 If so maybe at very tiny dosages barely affecting the pH. Lowering pH several units, it comes dangerously close to crash point to stabilize it. Which i think is extremely difficult with doing weekly water changes and extremely crash risky with doing very little water changes.
A guess, lowering pH has more with beter ion exchange in plant v. ferts than the Co2 it produces. Lots of people report accelerated plant growth with adding vinigar to the a planted tank. Personaly i rather skip it, i don't trust it enough and don't want to drive me self crazy with monitoring it in a dairy like a boatswain. Learn to choose the correct plants and grow them in what you get is more forgiving and more fun.. 🙂