Calcium alone cannot form the skeletal material of corals and allow
calcareous algae to grow. Some other substances are needed as well. A few other
constituents are carbonate and bicarbonate. These two substances also have a
major impact on the stabilization of the pH in the proper range of 8.1 – 8.4.
Such stabilization is also called buffering.
The total carbonate and bicarbonate concentration is also called carbonate
alkalinity or carbonate hardness. The only difference between alkalinity and
carbonate hardness is a conversion factor.
NSW has an alkalinity of approx. 2.7 meq/L or approx. 7.5 dKH when expressed as
carbonate hardness.
For a stable system the alkalinity or carbonate hardness should have a value
similar to NSW or slightly higher and should preferably not fluctuate by more
than 5%. This means a maximum fluctuation of 0.14 meq/L or 0.4 dKH.
Therefore an alkalinity test kit should be capable in measuring in steps smaller
than 0.14 meq/L.
Since the major buffer components used for coral and calcareous algae growth are
bicarbonate and carbonate, they should be added to correct any decrease in
alkalinity or carbonate hardness.
A proper formulated buffer should function in such a way that the corrective
measures results in a long lasting effect and should not upset the pH of the
system. The alkalinity or carbonate hardness should be kept as stable as
possible requiring highly sensitive and accurate means for testing.
The Salifert KH/Alk test is very straightforward. It measures in sufficient
small steps of 0.1 meq/L or 0.3 dKH with a sharp color change. This makes
detection of important yet small change possible.
The kit can perform approx. 100 - 200 measurements.
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