Hi all,
This topic/question might be especially of interest to those growing with hydroponic / DWC setups.
Since switching my lighting over to 12/12 from 24/0 3 weeks ago I've had a struggle controlling water pH levels to keep them within range.
I've observed times where before lights out, pH would be around 6.2 and after 13 hours darkness pH would drop to 5.6. I've even seen 4.8 after 20 hours since last check.
Some background.
From: http://scienceline.ucsb.edu/getkey.php?key=826
"At night, when photosynthesis is not happening, they give off much more CO2 than they absorb."
From: http://ion.chem.usu.edu/~sbialkow/Cl...ic%20Acid.html
"The most common source of acidity in water is dissolved carbon dioxide."
With hydropinic/DWC setups most (all of us really) have some kind of system to aerate the water (typically an air pump with airstones attached bubbling air into the buckets/totes/reservoirs).
In my particular setup, I have the air pump inside my tent, with the air inlet taking air from inside the tent.
The other day the question came to me: Would the CO2 released by the plants overnight be causing the water pH to drop by such considerable amounts?
Some googling later I found the second link mentioned above.
Overnight the plants release CO2, this gets taken in by the air pump and the (higher than usual in the growing space) CO2 amounts are bubbled into the water creating carbonic acid which by itself would have a pH = 5.65.
I think that those of use already adjusting the water pH down after mixing nutrients would see this affecting the pH even more so over time.
My question to you guys:
If you've seen this problem before, how did you solve it?
Have any of you considered using a hose to let the air pump take fresh air from outside the grow space to bubble into the water, or have your air pump outside the grow space to pump it in with longer air tubes?
To test this idea I've taken a hose long enough to allow the airpump to draw intake air from outside the tent.
Will follow up with what I observe over a longer period of time.
This topic/question might be especially of interest to those growing with hydroponic / DWC setups.
Since switching my lighting over to 12/12 from 24/0 3 weeks ago I've had a struggle controlling water pH levels to keep them within range.
I've observed times where before lights out, pH would be around 6.2 and after 13 hours darkness pH would drop to 5.6. I've even seen 4.8 after 20 hours since last check.
Some background.
From: http://scienceline.ucsb.edu/getkey.php?key=826
"At night, when photosynthesis is not happening, they give off much more CO2 than they absorb."
From: http://ion.chem.usu.edu/~sbialkow/Cl...ic%20Acid.html
"The most common source of acidity in water is dissolved carbon dioxide."
With hydropinic/DWC setups most (all of us really) have some kind of system to aerate the water (typically an air pump with airstones attached bubbling air into the buckets/totes/reservoirs).
In my particular setup, I have the air pump inside my tent, with the air inlet taking air from inside the tent.
The other day the question came to me: Would the CO2 released by the plants overnight be causing the water pH to drop by such considerable amounts?
Some googling later I found the second link mentioned above.
Overnight the plants release CO2, this gets taken in by the air pump and the (higher than usual in the growing space) CO2 amounts are bubbled into the water creating carbonic acid which by itself would have a pH = 5.65.
I think that those of use already adjusting the water pH down after mixing nutrients would see this affecting the pH even more so over time.
My question to you guys:
If you've seen this problem before, how did you solve it?
Have any of you considered using a hose to let the air pump take fresh air from outside the grow space to bubble into the water, or have your air pump outside the grow space to pump it in with longer air tubes?
To test this idea I've taken a hose long enough to allow the airpump to draw intake air from outside the tent.
Will follow up with what I observe over a longer period of time.
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