<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=6707153#post6707153 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by Pandora
The "oxygenation" thing doesn't make much sense. Freshly made SW has already equalized with atmospheric oxygen (even if you were pumping in pure oxygen to saturate the water, as soon as you put it in the tank, this would happen). How much you can concentrate gas in a liquid depends on partial pressure of gas and the solubility coefficient, you're not going to change this buy putting it in the bucket overnight and pumping atmospheric air into it (um, you're the engineer--Henry's Law?)
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=6708114#post6708114 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by mmgm
Pandora:
If you consider the fact that the solubility of a given gas in a given solvent (in this case salt water) is determined primarily by the partial pressure of the given gas in contact with the liquid and temperature of the system, I think mixing with powerhead as stated would contribute to oxygenation of the water. This is because for a given container filled with water the actual contact of air to water is limited to a relatively small surface area compared to total volume of water in a container. As a result saturation only occurs at this air/water interface.
Mixing the water with a powerhead allows "ALL" of the total volume of water in the container to be exposed to the gas (air) and subsequently saturate as you state according to Henry's Law. Allowing bubbles to mix with water through the powerheads provides additional surface contact of air/water and can only help in saturation or oxynization of the water.
In my case I perform 50 - 70 gallon water changes. It takes 24 hours to generate this amount of water using a RO/DI unit. At the end of this 24 hour period the water is stagnant and needs to be excited/mixed with powerheads. In addition to aiding in oxygenation the mixing helps dissolve salt into the water. If this process is not followed there is a risk of loosing livestock......
In any case I think you are partially correct and if you are mixing water in a large thin pan as a container your rational would be accurate. (Although UM not very practical) Also, I would not mix smaller volumes of water (ie 5 gallons) before water changes.
Sometimes it's best to leave the Engineering to the trained/Educated Engineers......![]()
Cheers.....