I have a couple hundred pounds of rock that I have had in storage for the last 2+ years, just want to give it a good clean and put it in my new tank. Just wondering if just doing the bleach method would be good enough to give the rocks a good clean before adding to my new system, or should I also do the acid treatment to?
Even though its dead isnt it still considered waste and harmful to a tank? I would think you dont want dead organic material on those rocks?
wow had no idea. and ive been through this a bunch of times! very interesting - I thought the bleach "oxidizes" any and all organic matter, dead or alive. My rock always seems so clean from what I can tell.
Ok, so love this hobby b/c always learning![]()
dkeller, I use sodium hydroxide in the form of the roebic crystal drain opener. I recently learned you can get it much cheaper in pure forms. You say "a fairly dilute solution of sodium hydroxide (about 0.02M)". Can you dumb that down a bit? How much sodium hydroxide to, say, 10 gallons of water?
And that will surely kill all organics, dead or alive?
You are correct that bleach oxidizes organics, but the issue is that it oxidizes some organics. From a chemistry perspective, what you're trying to do is hydrolyze proteins to break them down into soluble compounds, and for lipids/fats, saponify them into a water-soluble form. There are quite a lot of ways to do this, but one of the cheapest/easiest way is to use sodium hydroxide and wait a few days.
To make a 0.02N (or 0.02M, it's the same with NaOH), you need to dissolve 0.08 g of NaOH per liter of water. For 10 gallons of water, that works out to 37.9L*0.08g = 3 grams.
If you need to do this by volume measurement, that's about 1/2 of a teaspoon.
Having said this and done the calculations, I realize I made a decimal point mistake in my previous post - I would use 0.2M NaOH, not 0.02M NaOH. So instead of 1/2 teaspoon of lye in 10 gallons, you need 5 teaspoons in 10 gallons.
You can let this mixture stew for several days with your rock - it won't dissolve the rock itself, nor make any hazardous fumes. Though realize that sodium hydroxide will definitely cause a chemical burn to your skin - wear gloves and splash protection for your eyes.
Once done, you can neutralize the sodium hydroxide with vinegar. You can also do it with hydrochloric acid, but if you do so, be very cautious - the neutralization reaction will be violent.