I've used ozone on and off for over 25 years. I've also done some basic testing using ORP as my guideline. Contact time is VERY relevant regardless of half life.
That was my point, actually. If the contact time were on the same order as about 8 times the half life (call it 20-30 minutes), then longer contact times would have little additional impact. As it is, essentially any dissolved O3 is going to remain dissolved in the fluid throughout its journey through the device, regardless of the time of contact. Of more importance, and in this case less quantifiable without empirical measurements is the saturation of O3 in solution. Contact time is certainly an important variable WRT saturation, up to the point where the solution approaches 100% saturation. It is this which determines the impact on ORP. How ORP relates to the biological activity of the setup is not going to be a simple matter, nor is a measure of ORP necessarily functionally related to the effectiveness of sterilization across various setups. All that said, there is no question for a given setup both the ORP and the sterilization effectiveness will generally increase with a greater contact time, as you say.
The ORP of the effluent from a skimmer injected with ozone is typically far less than that of an ozone reactor and you need a much high mg/hr of ozone for results that are even close to using a reactor that is tuned well.
I have no doubt at all this is probably true. In a simple skimmer, there may not be enough effective surface area to produce a high level of saturation of O3 in the solution.
You also don't smell the residual o3 in the air when using a properly setup reactor but you usually will with a skimmer.
I submit that is as much an effect of the carbon post-filter as the effectiveness of the reactor, coupled with the lower O3 concentrations employed with the reactor, more than the O3 efficiency of the reactor. I don't have any data on-hand, but I suspect less than half of the O3 is actually consumed in the reaction chamber. I suspect efficiencies that high would require a much larger reaction chamber with much smaller bubbles and much greater agitation. Even then, the efficiency may not approach 50%, depending on the solubility of O3 in the fluid.
If you can smell it, it is not good!
That is a bit of an over-statement as well as an over-generalization. Certainly continuous exposure to O3 levels high enough to be sensed by the human nose can cause various health risks, and as previously mentioned continuous exposure to various hydrocarbons can result in deleterious chemical reactions within the body of any artifice substantially composed of those compounds. Indeed, due to modest levels of O3 produced by various electrical devices in the physics lab where I used to work, rubber and certain plastic hoses never lasted very long, at all.
It is rather a different thing to make a blanket statement such as the one above. Being able to catch a whiff of O3 near a generator setup does not necessarily mean the setup is maintaining unhealthful levels of O3 in the room as a whole. I submit if it cannot be smelled more than 1/2 meter or so from the output and the room is reasonably well ventilated, then there is little cause for concern. If one can smell O3 whenever one walks into the room, it's a different matter.
Regarding using charcoal. HLLE has long been attributed to the use of carbon and in particular the dust associated with carbon.
I was unaware of this. Thank you.
Thanks, again.
Lastly, you mentioned poor bulb life and poor results from UV. I would have to question the model UV you were using
So did I. That's why I quit using it. I don't recall the make or model: that was 30 years ago.
as well as how you had it setup.
Water flowed in to the input and out of the output. What more is there?
A quality UV such as those from AquaUV has bulbs that last much longer than a cheap one.
'Not an unreasonable assertion. Mine only lasted a few weeks.
A UV that is too small will not have much if any impact.
It was sized to the tank (30 gallons, at the time).
Too much flow through the UV will also have little impact on overall water quality.
It had a pump included. I never measured the water flow.
Those graphs above show how effective UV can be. Those are on my 700 gallon system with a 114 watt AquaUV.
Scale may be a factor, here. Mine is currently only 100 gal.
You mentioned that the UV was a pain to maintain but there is next to no maintenance with a quality UV.
Replacing the bulbs was not all that easy, nor was it particularly cheap.
You have carbon that should be replaced every moths or two.
I was going to ask that. How does one know when / how often the carbon needs to be changed?
You have to run a drier for best use of ozone or risk damaging the generator. If you use beads, those need to be rechanged.
Did you mean, "recharged"? I have not received the O3 generator, yet, so I do not know what the drier media is. Is it by chance silica gel? Silica gel is easy to re-desiccate. That, and I can get it inexpensively from my local dive shop or online.