rpgraff said:
I tried skimming through this monster to find out if there was any testing done for concentrations removed. I didn't find it........Is this a theory or is there any actual data supporting that?
Well, it IS a great idea in theory, but then you have to look at the
whole picture. A Plenum works much like the DSB, in that it utilizes
anaerobic (oxygen free) bacteria to consume nitrates. What's going to
happen as you drain that plenum area? It's going to pull oxygen-rich
water through your previously anaerobic zones and wipe out most of your
anaerobic bacteria. This results in the shut-down of your nitrate
reduction capacity until it can recycle itself out.
Both Chicago and Darrellh have answered your questions. I'll add a few points.....
1. Hook up a CPW system and smell the water that is initially discharged. You will not question it's being highly anoxic or if it is good or bad to remove again.
2. Since hooking up my CPW I have not had any measurable nitrates.
3. In commercial waste treatment the simultaneous nitrification and de-nitrification often takes place inside the same single tank. Denitrification starts to takes place in any zone depleted of oxygen. As Chicago has said, there is no reef keeping imaginary line of either / or, as many in the hobby try to make. It is simply a transitional zone where one or the other start to dominate. Both types of bacteria are present through out the substrate waiting to dominate, based on available food source and oxygen or lack of.
If oxygen is depleted in a oxic zone, which can take place in as little as 15 to 20 minutes, denitrifying bacteria will being to dominate.
I believe that when CPW is used, the whole bed depth is being feed with a positive movement of fresh food source through through out the bed depth and both oxic and anoxic processing is increased.
In addition, if bound up phosphates are being released because of the drop pH in the bed, they are hopefully being drawn off with the CPW.
I believe that most DSB's go bad when sulphide reduction takes over and dominates. I have read numerous comments on the RC list from reek tank keepers who have been forced to rebuild their tanks because of the black sulphide reducing zones in the DSB expand and move to with an inch of the top of the bed.
In any case you have established a positive flow into the bed and out through the CPW. If the nitrification cycle has not been completed, what remains is being drained out of the system. The suphide odors, you initally smelled from a system that is not drained at all, disappear.