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i have a closed medium of water that i pass electricity throw it and i have bacteria and alga in it that i dont want
the water contain 5% of NaCl in it and i wounderd if i put some chlorine will it cange the equilibrium and change the conductivity of the water a thing that i dont want.
if so how can i keep the conductivity in the water and get rid of the alga

2007-07-16 19:50:14 · 4 answers · asked by afutz 1 in Science & Mathematics Chemistry

4 answers

If you increase the total ionic strength (related to total salt concentration) your conductivity will increase. Depending on your source of chloride the changes can be minimal.

If you stick to using NaCl it shouldn't change much unless you add alot.

Is changing your voltage an option?

2007-07-16 19:56:06 · answer #1 · answered by ChemGuy 2 · 0 0

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2016-05-19 23:27:52 · answer #2 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

The amount of chlorine required to clean up alga is much lower than your target concentration. You probably need 10-20 mg/L of chlorine to do the job.

2007-07-16 19:59:01 · answer #3 · answered by cattbarf 7 · 0 0

Simple Answer!

Does Chlorine contain any salinity?, NO!

Will Chlorine disipate the algae?.....Yes!

What are YOU waiting for?

Don't THROW too much of anything into your 'closed medium' of H2O

2007-07-16 20:03:20 · answer #4 · answered by fmrebaf@sbcglobal.net 2 · 0 0

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