Is it possible the water hasn't really changed in the output tube? There is an awful lot of volume to replace at 1 drop a second. Nitrates don't surprise me yet. However I would have thought it was oxygen free by know. Fill a 1/4 measuring cup and time it. Then guesstimate how long it will take to replace the water in your pipe.
Got me thinking and did a couple calculations. Let me know is this sounds right?
1 drop = 0.05 milliliter = 1.32086E-05 gallon [US, liquid] / sec
1.32086E-05 gallon [US, liquid] / sec = 1.141223 g/day
Since I'm running a little less than 1 drop/sec so lets say 1 gal/day
Didn't calculate the volume of the output plumbing but I would guess that the flow would be enough to empty the plumbing several times per day.
May possibly be that flow is only part of what makes a sand bed anaerobic, and a few other key elements are missing.......wish I had more 5 gallon tanks and meters to work with (hint to sponsors).
Lokking at some factors that affect the amount of oxygen dissolved in water:
1. Temperature: As water becomes warmer, its ability to hold oxygen decreases.
Not much to change here. I could add a heater to the DSB in order to reduce the oxygen content, however, that may not be very efficient. I could use the same wattage pump to run a protein skimmer.
2. Photosynthetic activity: In bright light, aquatic plants are able to produce more oxygen. I don't believe this would impact a DSB due to the depth of the sand. In addition, my ORP values increased overnight to 300+mV, and are currently 199mV just before lights out.
3. Decomposition activity: As organic material decays, microbial processes consume oxygen.
I think this one is the BIG one that is currently missing in the DSB. Based on what I've seen so far could be the most important factor. With nothing to consume the oxygen within the bed would it not just diffuse from high to low concentration until evenly distributed.
Maybe it's not low flow that causes anaerobic conditions for denitrification directly. However, the low flow causes organic matter to settle which decays and in turn consumes oxygen. As the oxygen diffuses from the water column into the bed it is consumed by decomposition resulting in anoxic/anaerobic zone below???
4. Mixing and turbulence: Wave action, waterfalls, and rapids all aerate water and increase the oxygen concentration.
Occurs in the water at the surface, and effects are probably negligible within the bed.
5. Salinity: As water becomes more salty, its ability to hold oxygen decreases.
Not much to change here
Not a expert either, just throwing stuff out there as well.........still wish I had more 5 gallon tanks and meters to work with (hint).
Will stay the course for now.