Yes you can use an Ozone generator and a Chlorine generator together. The Ozone generator will actually extend the life of the cell on the Chlorine generator because the ozone takes care of the bulk of the oxidation workload, thus the Chlorine generator does not need to be run as hard.
A basic pool chlorine generator cost in Arizona is between $149.00 and $999.00 The cheapest chlorine generator costs around 150$ plus tax and/or shipping. You can buy these from Sears or K-Mart online, but you may have to call the individual locations to see if they have them in stock.
A reasonably healthy pool should have nothing in the water but chlorine or other sanitizer to sanitize it cyanuric acid to stabilize the chlorine salt if its a saltwater pool sometimes there may be algaecide there as well, muriatic acid, calcium , some dust, oils. body-fats and a few other impurity's.
No it does not. There is no danger with evaporating salt water.
A chemical difference is that sodium reacts with water to make an alkali, and chlorine plus water give acids. A physical difference is that sodium is a solid at room temperature and chlorine is a gas.
Ozone depletion occur due to chain reaction initiated by CFC and other radicals. let CH2FCl be a CFC then the reaction would be such , CH2FCl = Cl . (chlorine radical) + remaining part O3 + Cl . = O2 + O . (formation of radical oxygen)+ Cl . and this radical oxygen propagate the whole reaction until termination occur !!
Only oxygen can "build up" the ozone layer. The "ozone layer" contains some ozone which is just three oxygen atoms bound together. Oxygen is normally found as two atoms bound together as O2, but if an O2 molecule is struck with light at 215nm (or shorter) it will break into two individual oxygen atoms which can then bind to an O2 to form O3. O2 + photon > 2 O O2 + O > O3 (ozone) The ozone layer, like the rest of the atmosphere, is comprised of about 78% nitrogen and 21% oxygen plus the usual host of trace gases... and the extra ozone.
The formula for carbon plus chlorine is CCl4, which represents carbon tetrachloride.
Iron plus chlorine equals Iron chloride is the word equation.
The Emerald III is a bigger generator than a Emerald Plus.
No.
Chlorine + Magnesium Bromide ----> Magnesium Chloride + Bromine
goldfish will survive in tap water but it is best to put a bit of chlorine control in the water plus you will need a filter if you want the water and tank to stay cleaner for longer :)