Tetrasodium Ethylenediaminetetraacetate Hydrate (What a mouthful). David L. Burkhart
Burkhart Technology Services
http://www.BurkhartTech.com
The active ingredient in naval jelly is phosphoric acid. It is a rust removal product used to dissolve and remove rust from metal surfaces.
Baquacil reacts with iron the same way a Chlorine pool would. Most times the water will turn either brown or green and the product to clear it up is the Baquacil Metal Control which will filter them through. It is best to check your filter during this time and hose it off if needed because the filter will look like it has rust in it. I cannot answer your specific question re iron - but considering the other features of baquacil, such as 'it eats plastic', 'it results in what is known as pink slime', it would not surprise me i the reaction was 'bad'. Biased? You may say that, but believe me, I have never seen a baqucil pool with truly clear water and I have spoken with many pool owners who have grown to hate the product, its performance and its cost.
Lithium is NOT the most active alkali metal. Francium is the most active but is available in such trace quantities and radioactive that for practical purposes it is Cesium that is considered most active.
Hydrogen...
carbon
The active ingredient in rust remover is usually phosphoric acid or oxalic acid, which work to dissolve and remove rust from metal surfaces.
The active ingredient in naval jelly is phosphoric acid. It is a rust removal product used to dissolve and remove rust from metal surfaces.
Oxidizer, Metal Control (if needed), Sanitizer and Algistat, then Algaecide. Wait at least 1 hr btw adding products and always have filter running.
Rust is the chemical product of the oxidation of a metal, usually iron and its alloys. The active ingredients of rust are iron (Fe) and oxygen (O) to form iron oxide (FeO)s.
No, a less active metal cannot replace a more active metal in a chemical reaction. In a single displacement reaction, a more active metal will displace a less active metal from its salt solution, but the reverse is not possible.
Cerium
Baquacil reacts with iron the same way a Chlorine pool would. Most times the water will turn either brown or green and the product to clear it up is the Baquacil Metal Control which will filter them through. It is best to check your filter during this time and hose it off if needed because the filter will look like it has rust in it. I cannot answer your specific question re iron - but considering the other features of baquacil, such as 'it eats plastic', 'it results in what is known as pink slime', it would not surprise me i the reaction was 'bad'. Biased? You may say that, but believe me, I have never seen a baqucil pool with truly clear water and I have spoken with many pool owners who have grown to hate the product, its performance and its cost.
Lithium is NOT the most active alkali metal. Francium is the most active but is available in such trace quantities and radioactive that for practical purposes it is Cesium that is considered most active.
yes
An active metal is a type of a metal that tends to react with toughness, and speed, to other elements because of the arrangement of electrons in its structure. Each active metal has a single electron in its outer shell.
The principal ingredient in misch metal is cerium, which makes up about 50-60% of its composition. Misch metal is a rare earth alloy used in various applications such as in flints for lighters and in alloying agents for steel.
chlorine