I have been using the salt water parameters. As far as flow and lighting.
Some of the difference will be. Leaving lights on for a 24hr duration. If your lights are powerful. It will beach out the screen. If the bulbs are too close, and when growing a new screen.
I uses Santa Monica GEM Lights, on my waterfall scrubber. Mine is not a text book example as it is single sided, and packed into a 12" × 4" sump space. It grows a colorful mix of algea greens, reds. " red beard algea"
It is 7" wide 10" long. The bottom is in 3" of sump water. The submerged part is always green hair algea.
The tanks have African cichlids. That get over fed. Mechanical filter floss gets cleaned every other day. Nitrates Max out at 20ppm with a 40% water change 5 times per month.
The more water flow you have the better.
My up flow scrubber is on a different tank. It grows only green hair algea. Using 10 watt purple grow led. The algea grows well on the inside of the glass, blocking the screen.
The bubble diffuser has to be cleaned every couple of months.
I like to prime a new screen in a tank were algea can gain a foot hold. As the diatoms, and slime can slow algea from attaching.
I have had a very turf like algea growing. It seamed to grow best with more acetic lighting. 420- 460nm. I still have a lot of it in a "ball of chauto" misspelled.
Any led that looks red but is not a genuine 660nm deep red. Is worthless.