The sole use for activated carbon is because of this process adsorptionChemistry The process by which one substance, such as a solid or liquid, takes up another substance, such as a liquid or gas, through minute pores or spaces between its molecules. A paper towel takes up water, and water takes up carbon dioxide, by absorption.
The process by which molecules of a substance, such as a gas or a liquid, collect on the surface of another substance, such as a solid. The molecules are attracted to the surface but do not enter the solid's minute spaces as in absorption. Some drinking water filters consist of carbon cartridges that adsorb contaminants.
There is simply no point in putting carbon into your tank under the substrate as any nutrients that it takes up will have come from what you have added in the first place......
The purpose of carbon in the substrate is to adsorb nutrients from the water column so that algae cant's use them plants can still get to the nutrients because thier fine root hairs penetrate the carbon granules
There is simply no point in putting carbon into your tank under the substrate as any nutrients that it takes up will have come from what you have added in the first place. Also if you have plants then DOC produced from leaf litter will in itself do a pretty good job of locking metals away.
There is a very good point in using carbon under the substrate. It makes nutrients available to plants through their roots, as well as via the water column. This allows more room for error in water column dosing, and having nutrients available via the water column and substrate brings the best results in terms of plant growth. If what you are saying is true, then substrates such as ADA Aqua Soil would also be pointless.
I know nothing about ADA Aqua Soil ... what I do know is that your statement regarding carbon just doesn't make sense.
Would placing carbon beneath the sand, cause it to draw down carbon dioxide and other gasses, thus reducing the potential for anaerobic decay pockets?