Breakpoint Chlorination
HTML-код
- Опубликовано: 10 мар 2012
- www.watersifu.com
This video will discuss breakpoint chlorination in detail explaining combined residual, free residual, total residual, and chlorine demand. Also dicussed will be how you may actually see questions relating to breakpoint chlorination on your state exams
Not everyone in the government is trying to keep anyone alive. Appreciate you if you take your job seriously
Thanks man the Water Sifu, Appreciate it, listen to all your podcasts on my 40 mile drive to work in the mornings. Have an exam tomorrow, feeling confident. Not arrogant, but confident. Be Blessed
Thank you. I appreciate the nice words! I hope you did great on your exam!
@@TheWaterSifu "Stricto Crypto" 🤣🤣 funniest part in the treatment flashcard podcast
This is great! going in for a state test in a few days and wanted to brush up on breakpoint chlorination... you really explained it better than anyone i've heard it from yet! I'll definitely be playing this when coworkers ask me to help them understand this concept. 10/10!
what are you doing now? just asking
THank you!!! You actually make sense of it unlike my professor and everything else
This is a really good video and you did a great job of explaining breakpoint chlorination. I actually studied up on this for my grade 3 test in wastewater and I was still somewhat confused by breakpoint chlorination but you really broke it down and simplified it, thanks man.
Thank you, MrLaker. I totally appreciate that.
Thank you ... Your video was really helpful , you have a style in explaining .. Thanks again
Great video. Awsome job on breaking it down.
Thank you so much for your comment! I really appreciate it and am glad you find the video helpful. Best of luck with the exam!
Thank you !!! Great explanation!
I enjoyed your video very much. Thank you.
Very pracitical and helpful. thanks!
Thank you for this explanation.
thank you very much you've helped me in my presentaion tomorrow
Great video. Thanks.
Nice explanation
Understood it after watching it the second time.
thank you. this video really helps!
Cheers , appreciate the videos in 2021, north of the border.
Thanks Ty, Appreciate your hard work in helping us for the exams.
Thanks, David.
You Rock 🎸 Finally in the water industry 🙏 I bought your DVD s! And still review them to this day! Thanks 🔥
:-) Thank you, and congrats on getting into the industry!
Hey Ty, I just stumbled across your channel doing research for some of my water chemistry videos. You rock man! Great information and explanations! Keep it up!
Thank you!
thanks excellent and simple to understand
It's helped me sir thank you
well explained to be honest! thank you.
Easier to understand than just going through the book, thank you.
Thank you Donovan. Much appreciated.
Truly appreciate everything you do man. 🙌🏼🤘🏼
Thank you!
The video is great, thanks so much. I have a swimming pool, and the video makes me wonder if the folks at the pool store (and certain pool supply websites) are telling me something that's incorrect. They say (1) I should shock my pool from time to time (I think that means I need to reach the breakpoint by adding enough hypochlorite...okay so far) and 2 (here's where I get confused) they say any time I fall short of the breakpoint (by adding insufficient amounts of hypochlorite), it will become harder, and eventually impossible, to reach breakpoint in the future, until eventually I'll need to drain the pool. It seems to me that if I fall slightly short of the breakpoint point, the only problem would be that I'll have no residual chlorine, which can be fixed by adding more hypochlorite. I don't see why falling short would make it harder (or impossible) to reach breakpoint in the future. Am I missing something? Thanks again for your super-clear presentation.
Thank you so much!!!!😁
Thanks a lot sir 👏👏
Helpful, thanks sir,
Thanks for fantastic information
mohammed mohjoub
There is a God..!!! Thanks!! Trying to get my liscense in Ny thank you for your info!!
Thank you!
excellent!
i can't believe i just found you, where have you been all my life???? you've had this since 2012????? a whole year wasted!!!
Thank you
Thanks I am having a retake on this 😁😀😊😚🤗🙃
Thank you sir
Very helpful
thanks brotha!
Hi Ty, when I go to test my pool water the chlorine test shows no level of chlorine, just a milky white look. what does that indicate???
Thanks
Rob
Thank you very much for the compliments! ... and speaking of paying, I promise everyone I didn't pay you for those very kind words... lol
kamsahamida for my revision :D
What is the difference betweenfree chlorine and residual chlorine And what is required in the sewage rate
thanks a lot! great ability of explanation! but i want to know about the THM in this process plz
Thanks! Although trihalomethanes are formed as a result of chlorine combining with certain organic precursors, they really don't have anything to do with the breakpoint curve. Including them here would have only confused issues. For more info on THM formation, check out my free podcast (#10, "Biological Contaminants and Disinfection") at the above website.
How to remove the chlorate (ClO3) from disinfection solution?
Thanks
Dude your info is great. Music not so much at least for my wife
hahaha... Thank you for the compliments on the info! As for the music, well it was freeware music that I could use when I started the site, and it was better than the other options. Over time, I'm not sure if I agree with your wife or not. Some days I might say "yes" and other days "no". I actually get a lot of compliments on it from people who think I personally did it, but I could never play that. :-)
Thanks for the vid but I have a big big doubt:
Chlorine boiling point is 29.15 F so what will happen when Chlorinated tap water reaches 29.15 F degrees? Chlorine vanishes (vapour)?
I hope someone can reply.
I cant understand the reason behind the first drop of the curve. I s any one can explain
Which one is the better at killing pathogens? Free or Combined? Which I be gives a medicinal taste?
Wanna hop in on your podcast. Could you give me the link?
They are all on the website linked in the description for this post, or you can just search The Water Sifu in any podcast directory.
Tq
Do you know why our organic chloramines ( we know we have because we are getting monochloramine:4ppm on our titration and instrumentation with low NH3:< 1ppm coming into the CCB) only drop once the NH3 has dropped below .5 ppm.
Caleb, Sorry I can't help ya with that one without knowing your plant and all the factors that would apply.
lol... Thank you! That cracked me up.
What should be contact time of chlorine in water 10 minute or 30 minutes or x minute ? Please reply
There is no "one size fits all" answer to that question. Contact time is a number arrived at through a calculation which includes many variables such as plant flow, chlorine dose, and water temperature.
cool
Is there a PH change that's associated with break point chlorination?
You will get some pH change whenever you add chlorine to water, but it shouldn't be massive with the dose given to drinking water. For a detailed description, as well as how it changes whether you use gas chlorine or sodium hypochorite, please give my podcast #28 a listen, "chemicals in water treatment". You can find it at the above link in the video description.
Thank you so much for responding. Also thank you for this, as well as your other excellent videos.
Do clean water have breakpoint?
Hormin, I think you are confusing what breakpoint chlorination is. It is not a quality of the water itself, so you would not say that treated or non-treated water "has breakpoint". Rather, it is a treatment technique. So you could say that a water has been chlorinated past breakpoint.
narley dude
Honoured to have learned chemistry from Jesus himself..
rock music at the pool is the best. pisses me off when some a hole blares some rap music or techno crap
damn im lost!!!
hahaha ... i understand. Watch it again. Best of luck to you my friend.
aabe kahich samajana gela