Does anyone know of a good source to acquire the ingredients for a DIY salt mix? Here is a list of the necessary ingredients.
For those who are interested, the following artificial seawater recipe is taken from "Chemical Oceanography" by Frank Millero. It makes a recipe that matches 35 ppt seawater in terms of major ions, but does not try to match all minor and trace elements, most of which will be present as impurities in the major elements.
23.98 g sodium chloride
5.029 g magnesium chloride
4.01 g sodium sulfate
1.14 g calcium chloride
0.699 g potassium chloride
0.172 g sodium bicarbonate
0.100 g potassium bromide
0.0254 g boric acid
0.0143 g strontium chloride
0.0029 g sodium fluoride
Water to 1 kg total weight.
Before using that recipe I would calculate out the concentration added for each ion and compare it to NSW. You can find those numbers here:
http://www.mbari.org/chemsensor/pteo.htm
For simplicity, Atomic weight x Average concentration in ocean in mmol/kg = Concentration in mg/L
This is very important because in a salt like mag flake (magnesium chloride hexahydrate) over half of the weight is tied up as water molecules. If a recipe calls for a hexahydrate salt and you use an anhydrous salt you will have major problems.
I haven't looked at costs associated with every one of these salts but it's likely the sources for each ion can be tweaked as long as the final concentration remains the same. For instance there is no reason the sulfate needs to come from sodium sulfate, you can use magnesium sulfate instead.
I would skip the potassium bromide, there is plenty of bromide in calcium chloride as a contaminant now that Oxy-Chem doesn't remove it.
Here is one other recipe that will work, this mixes up to 35ppt for a little less than 20,000 gallons.
(a)=anhydrous
NaCl 4412lbs
MgSO4 (a) 632 lbs
MgCl2 (a) 368 lbs
CaCl2 (a) 196 lbs
KCl 124 lbs
NaHCO3 35 lbs
H3BO3 1875 grams
SrCl2 6H2O 1730 grams
KI 11.33 grams
ZnSO4 7H2O 5.23 grams
CoSO4 7H2O 3.92 grams
MnSO4 1H2O 2.30 grams
Na2MoO4 2H2O 2.16 grams
V2O5 0.43 grams
As far as sources, your biggest cost will come from the NaCl portion simply because of the proportion it contributes. You will want to find that as cheap as you can. Cargill and Morton are good places to start looking--get food grade without sodium ferrocyanate added.
The rest of the top 5 components can be found lots of places--try searching for salt distributors and pool supply companies in your state.
Cheapest place I've found sodium bicarbonate is at a rural feed supply store--apparently they use 50 pound bags to mix into cattle feed and you can get them for like $13. It's the same food grade stuff Arm & Hammer makes that we use in 2 part solutions.
The minor elements can be found cheaply at
www.noahtech.com (big props to William Wing for finding this website).
Having said all that, after shipping and everything else I doubt it will be worth your trouble unless you are going through major amounts of salt. I would think if you can get a very large group buy together it might be worth the savings, but still, so much more work than just buying buckets of IO...