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Home arrow FAQ arrow Equipment arrow What does a calcium carbonate reactor do?

What does a calcium carbonate reactor do? PDF Print

A calcium reactor is a very simple piece of equipment that dissolves carbon dioxide into the system's water, then brings that water into contact with a calcium carbonate substrate, CaCO3.  The lower pH caused by the dissolved carbon dioxide increases the solubility of the calcium carbonate.  It therefore adds both calcium, Ca2+, and carbonate, CO32-, to the system, increasing both calcium and alkalinity levels.

The calcium reactor adds 1 meq/l alkalinity for 20ppm calcium, which is the same ratio that is utilised by calcifying organisms.   This is the reason why it is such a good techinque for maintaining the calcium and alkalinity levels, it adds them in the same ratio in which they are used up.  This is also why it cannot be using for fixing imbalances of calcium/alkalinity, a separate additive (calcium chloride or sodium bicarbonate) has to be used for that or significant water changes.

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