SeanT
Premium Member
Hi Randy,
In the November, 2004, article of ReefKeeping Magazine, in your article entitled Iron Oxide Hydroxide (GFO) Phosphate Binders you wrote...
Does this mean that the PO4 can become unbound and released back into the water column?
If so, is there a time approximation before it happens?
Thanks,
Sean
In the November, 2004, article of ReefKeeping Magazine, in your article entitled Iron Oxide Hydroxide (GFO) Phosphate Binders you wrote...
Interestingly, the concentration of phosphate, in marine sediment pore waters whose sediment is iron oxide hydroxide, appears to be controlled to a great extent by phosphate bound to the iron.
Even more importantly, this bound phosphate is still available to the water column by exchange, so the sequestering is temporary rather than permanent.
This fact may be unimportant in an application where the GFO is presented and then removed with its bound phosphate, but in other applications, such as mud substrates or GFO accidentally released into the aquarium, it may become more of an issue.
Does this mean that the PO4 can become unbound and released back into the water column?
If so, is there a time approximation before it happens?
Thanks,
Sean