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How to work out how much air is needed?


danilada

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Oxygenation occurs at the surface of the water which is why the surface area of the water is used to calculate the carrying capacity of the tank.

The air bubblers just breaks up the water surface which increases the oxygen exchange at the surface.

I disagree. The surface area of the bubbles would far exceed the area of the tank's surface, so gas exchange is increased directly.

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gas exchange does occur within the bubbles, but the surface of the tank far exceeds the bubbles for the gas exchange due to the fact the air is also constantly refreshing itself, that is why you get almost the same amount of as exchange from a powerhead breaking the surface than as from an airstone.

if gas exchange did not occur in the bubbles then the CO2 systems would have a bit of trouble :P

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Oxygenation apparently occurs mostly when the air bubble is formed, and a miniscule amount occurs as the bubble rises to the surface.

The EPA define bubble size as coarse and fine. Fine is less than 2 mm. And more efficient oxygenation occurs with fine bubbles. I've seen those fine bubblers on youtube but never seen them in shops so I think they must be experimental or just not in mass production. Coarse bubbles have most of their effect on water oxygenation by destratifying the water and moving deoxygenated water to the surface.

As mentioned above a power head has the same effect, and a HOB waterfall filter perhaps even more so as the falling water can shear the larger bubbles formed at the surface into smaller ones which are then pushed below the surface.

PS: air stones need to be replaced every couple of months or cleaned as they rapidly clog up with dust pulled out of the air.

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the air curtain design should put out mirco bubbles, also the flexible airstones (when clean) do a very fine bubble, and the ceramic variety claim 1-2mm bubbles

smaller bubbles also move slower increasing contact time.

btw airstones can be cleaned easily by boiling for a few seconds.

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I had this continuous water change system setup where I was siphoning water using an air stone at the source end, and it eventually blocked up. Tried boiling and it made no difference. had to toss it.

The air stone was there so if the water level dropped below the level of the air stone, the siphon would not break.

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And that would allow the siphon to restart once the water level rose? ( my water source was several feet higher than the tank )

Ah, ok I see what you're saying. No, wouldn't work, would only work if you could have the inlet and outlet at the same height.

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gas exchange does occur within the bubbles, but the surface of the tank far exceeds the bubbles for the gas exchange due to the fact the air is also constantly refreshing itself, that is why you get almost the same amount of as exchange from a powerhead breaking the surface than as from an airstone.

Any chance you can link to some research that proves this? I don't get your refreshing comment, sorry. I wouldn't have thought each bubble's going to exhaust it's O2 exchanging capacity in the few seconds it's submersed?

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its not but when the O2 content is higher (and CO2 lower) it will transfer a lot quicker, i.e. if the air was very high in CO2 then CO2 is going to be absorbed until the concentrations are more equal and virtually no O2 would be absorbed

Agreed, but you've lost me again - I don't see what that has to do with what we're discussing? The air pumping through your airstone is the same as the air at the surface of the tank.

I'd imagine the surface area of all the bubbles combined greatly exceeds the area of the tank's surface, therefore the gas exchange of a bubbler exceeds the gas exchange at the tank's surface surface, and the benefit is direct gas exchange by the bubbles, not just increased surface agitation.

Maybe someone can google a reference on the rate of oxygen dissolution in a pressurized air bubble but I suspect it's not very quick. If you look at a planted tank you see lots of bubbles of pure oxygen being formed, and they seem to stick around for quite a while.

Vaguely recalling high school physics, I'd have thought you'd get more gas dissolving into water if bubbles are at a higher pressure than ambient atmospheric pressure? But then I don't think bubbles would be at a higher pressure in just a meter or so of water anyhow.

BTW, sorry to the OP for the hijack :oops:

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Vaguely recalling high school physics, I'd have thought you'd get more gas dissolving into water if bubbles are at a higher pressure than ambient atmospheric pressure? But then I don't think bubbles would be at a higher pressure in just a meter or so of water anyhow.

BTW, sorry to the OP for the hijack :oops:

If the bubbles were not at a higher pressure than the surrounding water, they could not form right?

I've kept my eye on an O2 bubble formed a few hours ago in my planted tank .. it's still there.

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Bubbles displace water as they form, but they're basically at the same pressure as the air outside the water is what I'm saying. If they were formed in deep water they'd be at a higher pressure than the same volume of air at the surface, but the change in pressure in a few feet of water is negligible.

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Bubbles displace water as they form, but they're basically at the same pressure as the air outside the water is what I'm saying.

Not really, same pressure as the water, but that will only the same as the outside air at the surface of the tank.

If they were formed in deep water they'd be at a higher pressure than the same volume of air at the surface, but the change in pressure in a few feet of water is negligible.

About half a PSI per foot, atmospheric pressure is roughly 14 PSI. So, roughly 1 PSI at the bottom of a 2 foot/600mm tank. So, yeah less than 10%, not really significant.

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