GlueSniffer
Active Member
And when you mix calcium carbonate and citric acid, such as in adding lemon juice to hard water, you get calcium citrate, carbon dioxide, and water.
After a refresher in chemistry..... Its been almost 20 years since I've looked at chemistry equations.
Carbonate is CO3
Calcium Carbonate is CaCO3
Citric Acid is C6H8O7
Citrate is C6H5O7
Calcium Citrate (Tricalcium Dicitrate) is Ca3 (C6H5O7)2
H2CO3 is Carbonic Acid
H2O is Water
CO2 is Carbon Dioxide
3 CaCO3 + 2 C6H8O7 > Ca3 (C6H5O7)2 + 6H + 3 CO3
The H and CO3 will combine to form H2CO3.
3 CaCO3 + 2 C6H8O7 > Ca3 (C6H5O7)2 + 3 H2CO3
The Carbonic Acid will disassociate into water and carbon dioxide
3 H2CO3 > 3 CO2 + 3 H2O
3 CaCO3 + 2 C6H8O7 > Ca3 (C6H5O7)2 + 3 CO2 + 3 H2O
So at this point we've turned Calcium Carbonate into Calcium Citrate plus Water and Carbon Dioxide.
Calcium Citrate is a salt that is "sparingly" soluble in water (0.95 g/L at 25C), compared to Calcium Carbonate which is barely soluble (0.013 g /L at 25C). Calcium Citrate is about 73X more soluble in water than Calcium Carbonate.
A gallon of water with 120 mg / L of CaCO3 contains 0.45 grams of CaCO3. That is 0.0045 moles of CaCO3 in a gallon of water. Every 3 moles of CaCO3 needs 2 moles of Citric Acid for the balanced equation. So we need 0.0030 moles of C6H8O7 to react with the calcium carbonate. Lemon juice has 1.44 grams of citric acid per oz. Thats 0.0075 moles per oz.
0.4 oz of lemon juice per gallon of water if the water has 120 mg / L of Calcium Carbonate should make 0.75 grams of Tricalcium Dicitrate which is soulble up to 3.5 grams per gallon of water at 25C. We started with 450 mg of CaCO3 per gallon of water that is only soluble up to about 50 mg per gallon at 25C.
I didn't take 3 semesters of weed school. My degree is in physics.
After a refresher in chemistry..... Its been almost 20 years since I've looked at chemistry equations.
Carbonate is CO3
Calcium Carbonate is CaCO3
Citric Acid is C6H8O7
Citrate is C6H5O7
Calcium Citrate (Tricalcium Dicitrate) is Ca3 (C6H5O7)2
H2CO3 is Carbonic Acid
H2O is Water
CO2 is Carbon Dioxide
3 CaCO3 + 2 C6H8O7 > Ca3 (C6H5O7)2 + 6H + 3 CO3
The H and CO3 will combine to form H2CO3.
3 CaCO3 + 2 C6H8O7 > Ca3 (C6H5O7)2 + 3 H2CO3
The Carbonic Acid will disassociate into water and carbon dioxide
3 H2CO3 > 3 CO2 + 3 H2O
3 CaCO3 + 2 C6H8O7 > Ca3 (C6H5O7)2 + 3 CO2 + 3 H2O
So at this point we've turned Calcium Carbonate into Calcium Citrate plus Water and Carbon Dioxide.
Calcium Citrate is a salt that is "sparingly" soluble in water (0.95 g/L at 25C), compared to Calcium Carbonate which is barely soluble (0.013 g /L at 25C). Calcium Citrate is about 73X more soluble in water than Calcium Carbonate.
A gallon of water with 120 mg / L of CaCO3 contains 0.45 grams of CaCO3. That is 0.0045 moles of CaCO3 in a gallon of water. Every 3 moles of CaCO3 needs 2 moles of Citric Acid for the balanced equation. So we need 0.0030 moles of C6H8O7 to react with the calcium carbonate. Lemon juice has 1.44 grams of citric acid per oz. Thats 0.0075 moles per oz.
0.4 oz of lemon juice per gallon of water if the water has 120 mg / L of Calcium Carbonate should make 0.75 grams of Tricalcium Dicitrate which is soulble up to 3.5 grams per gallon of water at 25C. We started with 450 mg of CaCO3 per gallon of water that is only soluble up to about 50 mg per gallon at 25C.
I didn't take 3 semesters of weed school. My degree is in physics.
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