A little science here will help.
There are two different scales used to measure the nitrogen compound relevant to us- ammonia (NH3), ammonium (NH4), nitrite (NO2) and nitrate (NO3).
The scales use by science is the Ntrogen scale. That only measure the N [art of thoe chemical fornmulas. As you can see they all have a single N atom. So 1 ppm of NH3 = 1 ppm of NH4 = 1 ppm of NO2 = 1ppm of NO3.
Most of our hobby kits measure using the Total Ion scale which counts all the atoms- i.e, the Hs and Os.
Like miles and kilometer or temp. in f and C can be converted to each other the same is true for the 2 scales.
The 10ppm of allowable nitrate is measured using the nitrogen scale. Using the total ipon scale makes it come to over 20 ppm. But mnitrate tests are a but inaccurate.
The most obvious place to see this is when the Dr. Hpvanec tells us during cycling not to let ammonia or nitrite to exceed 5 ppm. he is using the Nitrogens scale. On the Total Ion scale that would mean 6.4 ppm for ammonia and 16.4 for Nitrite. When it comes to nitrate 10 ppm as nitrogen becomes 44 ppm on the total ion scale.
NH3 = NH3-N * 1.21589 |
NH4 = NH4-N * 1.28786 |
NO2 = NO2-N * 3.28443 |
NO3 = NO3-N * 4.42664 |
Assumed atomic weights: H: 1.008, N: 14.007, O: 15.999