Truck
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24oC?
Well my hubby is a chemist and when I asked him if it was possible for the carbon filter to leech out toxins after its been left for too long he said YES. He didn't have time to explain fully (he's at work) but he said he'd explain it to me later so I can perhaps update the post tonight.
(As an aside!!!!!! the chemical equation written above is incorrect)
So apparently this IS possible and you should never keep a carbon filter in for longer than recommended.
THANK YOU!!!There is no cemical reaction in the adsorbtion (not absorbtion) of chemicals from the water. The physical makeup of the carbon means that chemical particles are trapped by it's surface area, however over time when the carbon becomes saturated with the chemicals we are trying to capture they can start to leech out again and in great enough concentration they will pollute the water.
In a properly cycled and stable tank there should be no chemicals produced by the tank that can't be dealt with by the bacteria in the filter. The only chemicals that need taking out are ones that we put in that can't be broken down like meds, and so the only time you really need to use carbon is after treating your tank for something and you want to remove the meds from the water.
That said, for 10 fish to die it points to some kind of poisoning, i would have thought that the buildup of chemicals from leeching carbon would be slow enough that it would take a long time to become apparent. Where's the tank situated? are there any air fresheners near the tank? Have any aerosol sprays been used near the tank?
Carbon releaseing something it has absorbed is highly unlikely,in fact unless some other chemical got into your tank to cause a reaction that would release something eles from the carbon it wouldn't ever happen.
Jazzz's Cake analogy is correct.
If conditions in the tank were favorable to the carbon adsorbing pollutants, what made that change. I don't like the argument about temperature, because clearly the temperature the tank is at is favorable to the carbon taking things in, not out, otherwise we wouldn't ever use carbon. sorry, I just didn't think that was a valid point, since the temperature isn't changing.
I don't know much about this, but as interesting as it definitely is, I'm not sure it is of a great deal of use or comfort to you Tom?
If your LFS pointed to Carbon as the likely cause of your fish deaths, then you can either believe them or not believe them? If you believe this 'old' Carbon to be the primary cause then at least it is something you have learned and you will either:
A) Do without carbon filtration in the future, or
B) Remove Carbon when it gets 'old' and you percive it not to be doing its job efficiently anymore, in future.
But as Oldman47 and Mistyash appear to be saying, it would seem that something else went very wrong. Your tank may have become contaminated and the Carbon did nothing to help, but didn't cause the problem in the first instance.
What did cause the problem in the first instance (if your stats were good as you have stated) is another matter...
Mark.
If conditions in the tank were favorable to the carbon adsorbing pollutants, what made that change. I don't like the argument about temperature, because clearly the temperature the tank is at is favorable to the carbon taking things in, not out, otherwise we wouldn't ever use carbon. sorry, I just didn't think that was a valid point, since the temperature isn't changing.