Hi all,
So denitrification happens instantly?
No, it doesn't, but I'm not that <"
interested in denitrification"> (the anaerobic conversion of nitrate (NO3-) to N2 gas). I actually actively don't want it to occur <"
in the filter">. I'm going to use plants to mop up the NO3- and I'm going to ensure that I always have enough oxygen <"
to complete the oxidation of ammonia (NH3) to nitrite ( NO2-) and nitrate (NO3-)">.
I'll give you an analogy, this one is particularly for Paulo (
@LondonDragon) and also because I use this forum as a <"
form of therapy">.
You are invited, at short notice, to a meeting by your IT services. There is only one agenda item, it is "how do you drink a glass of water?"
Right at the start of the meeting you say "I've drunk water, you pick the glass up and swallow the water", and they say "you aren't here to offer any input, you are purely a box ticking exercise" and "We have already identified the most effective process for drinking water, it is to splash it out of the glass with a spoon and then catch the droplets in your mouth".
The meeting starts, but the only discussion is about the optimal shape for glass and spoon.
Substitute drinking water for "Nitrification". glass for "Canister Filter", spoon for "Biohome, Matrix etc" and plant/microbe biofiltration for "Pick it up and Drink it" and that is where I think we are.
Could ammonia pass through the media in a diluted form then gets diluted each time it circulates through the media?
Yes, that is exactly what is happening in the "Activated Sludge" image, the flocs of microbes are being constantly bathed in ammonia and oxygen. As long as there is enough oxygen nitrification continues.
cheers Darrel