sillygoose
New member
We had this situation out on a job site where a carbon/coconut filter was used to remove diesel odor from a water sample. It did a great job removing volatile organics but now the pH is quite high - bouncing from 9-12 from neutral. I did a bit of investigating and this may have occurred because the carbon was not properly wetted before it was put into use. I suggested they leave the filter stay wet for a day before trying again. I hope to have some new data tomorrow morning.
So my question is, has anyone noticed this phenomenon with running carbon? Do you get an initial pH spike and could you actually use this to bump pH up when it is too low?
So my question is, has anyone noticed this phenomenon with running carbon? Do you get an initial pH spike and could you actually use this to bump pH up when it is too low?