Nova 8;792185; said:
Ever thought they go with bubbles as its more cost effective compared with a wakemaker of somesort, even though it may be less effective. The wavemaker would need more electricity, maintiance and room whereas for bubbles you only need a pump and hose. Which will use less electricity and room and require less money to setup and future maintiance. But in an aquarium both are fairly cheap. It cost me roughly $40AUD for a large pump, hoses, suckers and airstone whereas it is $50AUD for a good, powerful filter which also help keep the water clean.
I dont even know where to begin and I have to go into work in just a few minutes......
The test was done with 500 ml beakers, no taper. You are correct that it has very little surface area by itself.
You are missing the point entirely. Dissolved Oxygen
CONCENTRATION is independent of volume. If the same experiment had been done on a larger scale, say 1000, or 1 million gallons, and the same
proportion of bubbles was used the results would be the same.
I have not personally tested this on my aquarium because it is not necessary in my case. Most fish will be healthy at DO concentrations above 5.5 mg/l, it takes more waste than my fish can produce to drop the DO below that level. Along those lines, and similar to what I told you in my email Nova; The alternate methods that the rest of you swear by are more than sufficient, the results that I pointed out to you also showed that. I never said that using powerheads and the like didnt work, I simply stated that using air bubbles was superior. I do know that what I have said before will work regardless of water volume, it is proven every day not 20 miles from me in the Elk Grove Ca wastewater treatment plant. There is more waste treated through that plant in one day than every fishkeeper combined on MFK sees in a year. So yes the experiment uses a small volume of water, but the principles apply to much larger volumes in the
exact same way, whether its 180 gallons or 180 million gallons.
You are mistaken to think that aerating water through bubbling is cheaper than surface agitation, it is actually quite a bit more expensive, and plants nearing capacity often use pure oxygen instead of plain air. Both systems, aeration and mechanically moving the water most likely could be run using the same size motors, the aeration systems are much more complex, require more in design and construction costs, and cost more to maintain
Sorry I must leave now. I will return this evening to continue this conversation.
One final note though, this experiment is done in 18 different sessions every semester at CSUS alone, this is likely true at other universities around the world that have enivironmental engineering classes/labs. The purpose of which is to understand gas transfer and also to show which methods of aeration produce the best results. It is unfortunate that you fail to see the proof, I do however have the privelage of having knowledgable people to explain it to me and answer every question I throw out them with crystal clarity