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Cleaning and reactivating a carbon filter

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    Cleaning and reactivating a carbon filter

    I have a 6" inline carbon filter that I took out of service a couple of years ago. It's taking up space. I'd like to clean it and reactivate the carbon. Google has not been much help. Neither has youtube. Does anyone have any tips or advice? Base on what I've read and vids watched I'm wondering if the juice is worth the squeeze but I don't want to throw the thing in the land fill either. It's a given the carbon will eventually degrade but I can't find any info on how long that takes other than it depends on the environment.
    Gorilla Grow tents, HLG Lamps, Coco/Perlite 50/50, All Autopot, CX Horticulture nutrients full line
    Growing photo's and autos

    #2
    This is a shot in the dark since I only know the basics.
    If what activates carbon is heat, what about reheating your carbon?
    C'mon, mule!

    Coco/perlite
    3x3x6

    Comment


    • golfnrl
      golfnrl commented
      Editing a comment
      You're on to something, I've read in a couple of places that heating the charcoal does reactivate it. I might just blow this one out, reheat it and see what happens. Maybe someone has a better method they'll share. And I'm giving this waaaay too much thought.

    #3
    On a side note, I threw out my SF carbon pellets and replaced them with a new bag yesterday and just searched SF and Amazon for replacement bags and no dice. One would think that the carbon pellets would be a hot seller. Guess not. I got a blooming LSD auto that stinks!

    Comment


      #4
      You need to wash it first and some add citric acid to the wash. It then needs to be left to dry and then heated.

      Activating carbon takes very high temps...from memory north of 800⁰C. So heat it safely as high as you can to complete the drying in an oven.

      Humidity kills carbon filters, high humidity that is, so only use them later in flower when the dank is on and RH is low. They will last a long time with that approach in a low RH environment.

      Edit. Seal them tightly in plastic in a low RH environment for storage.
      Flower Room: 11' x 7' x 7.5'H, 480w AC, 13gal/day dehumidifier, 1.5gal ultrasonic humidifier, 60gal (27gal usable) nute tank, 16" pedestal fan & 18" wall fan. Lighting and climate automated. Hand watering.
      Veg Cupboards: ​​​​​​Two 4x2x6H cupboards. SF2000 Evo in one SF7000 in other. Climate controlled and automated. Hand watering
      Aeroponics Low Pressure Bucket: 20W LED. 5 clones & 20W LED 11 clones
      Lights: Mars Hydro FC-E1200W, SF-7000, SF-2000 evo in flower room.
      Medium: Coco/perlite, 7.2gal pots, no drains
      Current Grow: ​​​5 x Photos Franklin's Orange Zkittles x Sour Diesel in flower room, 3 Franklin's White Widow x Sour Diesel Clones, 13 x Orange ZkittleZ x Sour Diesel clones in Aeroponics buckets x 2.
      Last Grow: A mix

      Comment


        #5
        I have been wondering the same thing and have also struggled to find any information. Something I’ve thought about is automobiles use carbon to trap fuel vapors. When saturated a valve opens that sucks the vapors into the engine using vacuum. What if you put the carbon filter into a vacuum chamber of sort (yeah I know we all have one sitting around lol)? Also, the scientist in me thinks that if high heat is what activates carbon can’t you lower the boiling point by putting something under vacuum? So I theory you could reactive you filter with only 100 degrees (just spitballing) under vacuum vs 800 at normal pressure. What y’all think? Need another hit or have had too many?

        Comment


        • golfnrl
          golfnrl commented
          Editing a comment
          I think I read that the reheat can be done in an oven but your idea makes sense I think, as I have no way to heat anything to 800 degrees. Another hit may make it more clear, IDK but its worth a try. :>)

        #6
        Let's see if'n I can get this right.
        The initial process of activating carbon is done in an oxygen free environment at temperatures past 800°C.
        The idea is to create surface area.
        Once the initial process is done, you can't create more surface area.
        'Reactivating' the carbon is more about removing impurities it has picked up.
        The scant I have read is all about washing/rinsing (@Bluey's citric acid wash) and reheating it in your oven.
        I don't want to post links and junk because, really, this is all stuff I've pieced together.

        I read someone in the forum say carbon filters are bad because they are made using mined coal. That is not necessarily true. A carbon filter is just that: a filter that uses carbon. That carbon can be made from any number of renewable resources, including... wait for it... coco coir.
        C'mon, mule!

        Coco/perlite
        3x3x6

        Comment


        • Bluey
          Bluey commented
          Editing a comment
          Early carbon filters were made so they could be easily disassembled and the carbon washed but they don't do that any more. The life of the filter reduces a lot after its first use. I'm not sure its cost/time effective to do this anymore to any but the larger more expensive filters.

          Once the activated carbon filter no longer filters the air properly it requires regeneration. It's still activated carbon.

          There's a company in Sweden I think it is that makes a huge amount of activated carbon from coco as Ginge said. They are one of the biggest manufacturers of activated carbon globally.

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