silica removal

rigleautomotive

Premium Member
Is there a proven media or another process for reducing the silica in a reef.I am going to add a second silica buster di cartridge to my rodi but i want to try to get the # down in the tank also.i have a phosban reactor hanging around to use if you guys think there is a trusted media i can use or some other method Thanks in advance
 
Silica can be removed from raw water easily with standard demineralization techniques. Normally silica is present in a weak acidic form. Ion exchange will remove this as long as the anion resin is the strong base type. Silica in deionized water can easily be reduced to 20-50 ppb. Reverse osmosis will also remove silica by 90-98%. Both of these techniques are non-specific for silica, meaning they also remove all other ionic components along with the silica. Normally these ods work well for most well or surface waters where silica is below 15-20 ppm. In some cases for very large flow rates you can remove silica with lime softening techniques. In lime softening the silica is co-precipitated along with magnesium present in the water (or added if necessary). High temperature softening greatly improves silica removal. For high silica waters as seen in Mexico, Hawaii or other sandy areas where levels are 50-60 ppm or higher, the ion exchange and RO options are more troublesome because you may exceed solubility limits for one, and also you are more likely to have significant levels or non-ionic colloidal silica. This will not ion exchange and may foul an RO membrane. Typically this must be removed with ultrafiltration.

This was taken from another web page, but if you need any help with getting media for ultrafiltration Dan, let me know. I can get anything at wholesale price.
 
Also this is what I found, fwiw it looks like a difficult task.

Title:Methods for removing contaminants from water and silica from filter media beds Document Type and Number:


Abstract:The method for removing silicon dioxide from a contaminant-removal media bed comprises adding a scrub solution containing an acidic solution of sodium fluoride to a media bed containing silicon dioxide. The scrub solution is allowed to remove the silicon dioxide before the scrub solution is removed from the bed.
 
Thanks jon for info,i am actually looking for a media i can run in a reactor to lower the amount in the tank.i have learned that the spectre pure silica buster is a great di cartridge to remove it from the tap water.
 
I believe gfo (granulated ferric oxide)will remove silica as well as phosphate.
 
I agree that GFO is a good way to bring it down in an existing reef. It will also likely drop fairly fast ton its own. In my tank, it dropped in a few days:

Silica in a Reef Tank
http://advancedaquarist.com/issues/jan2003/feature.htm

from it:

Figure 4. The concentration of soluble silica as a function of time after dosing. Dosing was done at t=0. The concentration for t=0 (30 uM) is an estimate based on what was added and the estimated total system volume.


Silica_Figure_4a.gif
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=13700892#post13700892 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by Boomer
Dan

Why the concern ? First, what is the silica level, in the tap and tank ? NSW is ~ 2 ppm but we try to keep it under 1 ppm. GFO's will remove Silica. You do not need a second Silca Buster buy a long shot.

Silica in a Reef Tank
http://advancedaquarist.com/issues/jan2003/feature.htm

Reverse Osmosis/Deionization Systems to Purify Tap Water for Reef Aquaria
http://reefkeeping.com/issues/2005-05/rhf/index.htm

here are the results i got from AWT which i know you guys dont have alot of faith in but i thought i would try to reduce it in a safe way if possible.i am running a regular di cartridge from the filter guys now and azdesert rat said if i add a second di cartridge (silica buster) it would further reduce the silica in my make up water.i am always just trying to make my reef a little better.i really dont have any diatom or other algae problems as of now though.

Silica (Sio2-3)
Natural Seawater Value: 0.040 mg/L
Acceptable Range: 0.000 to 0.500 mg/L
Tested: 1.3 mg/L
(HIGH) Your silica level is too high. We recommend that you use a silica specific R/O
membrane in addition to deionization resin for your make-up/top-off water. You may also
use a commercially available phosphate absorber, as these will also remove some silicate.
Silicate is required by many types of sponges for growth/reproduction, but will also
encourage brown diatom algae growth. Any level above 0.3 mg/L may cause a diatom
bloom in the aquarium.
 
thanks randy ,thats interesting


i have not tested the rodi for silica,i dont even have a test kit yet so i dont know where its at but my tds reads 0 coming out of the di
 
If you do not have a diatom problem, there is no reason to worry about silicate, regardless of whether that level might be real or not. IMO, if the TDS reads 0, there is no need to worry about silicate in the RO/DI water either. :)
 
ok thanks,its the OCD coming out of me i guess.LOL.I am always trying to look for ways to better my reef so i thought trying to reduce that # would be a good place to start.
 

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