Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.

In theory, I can lower phosphate by adding 1219 mg ethanol and 808 mg potassium nitrate at the same time?
C2H6O to KNO3
106*(12*2 + 6 + 16) / 2
to
16*(39 + 14 + 48)
I am not suggesting doing this. I'd want to try less carbon to more nitrate if I do it for real.

Trying to understand this more. So for every ppm of phosphate I would need 16 ppm of nitrate and what is the 106 ppm of and what is a good source for it?
I agree denitrification uses Carbon without creating organic tissue, however Nitrate is still used, although with a different ratio. Of course, different bacteria may also use different ratios. As I said, I don't think exact math is useful, I just included it as sometimes I am off by a factor of 10 or 100.
I still feel dosing both Nitrate and Carbon at the same time will be useful to my tank. The actual ratio will be found experimentally, but I need to start somewhere. Redfield is a good starting point, factoring in that too much Carbon will be far worse than too much Nitrate.

I do want to dose both with the goal of reducing phosphates. I haven't found anything on the forums about this, I thought I'd be the first. My concern is Carbon dosing a Nitrate starved environment. Bacteria will probably still form and further use Nitrate, to the detriment of everything else that needs it.
I want to add enough Nitrate it goes up to around 5ppm, and at the same time use ethanol to prevent the current algea outbreak from getting worse.

Great thread and almost exactly my situation. Unfortunately, it doesn't help much figuring out how much to start dosing.
Do you think dosing equal parts ethanol and potassium nitrate is a good starting point?
Bw, I meant equal parts by weight ethanol and potassium nitrate. This is not equal ppm Carbon to Nitrate.


