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Joined: Nov 2007
Posts: 110
Lunker
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OP
Lunker
Joined: Nov 2007
Posts: 110 |
Does anyone know the difference between the different types of water.. Deionized, Distilled, Reverse Osmosis, Demineralized water? I'm setting up my DO meter and wonder if $1.00/gal grocery store distilled works the same as $25.00/gal DI.
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Joined: May 2004
Posts: 13,975 Likes: 277
Moderator Lunker
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Moderator Lunker
Joined: May 2004
Posts: 13,975 Likes: 277 |
We use DI water for certain plating and cleaning processes where I work, and for these purposes distilled water will not work as well as DI water (or even work at all). To the best extent of my understanding, DI water should be as pure as distilled water, but it has also been treated to remove free ions. Our DI water has limits on how far it can be piped from the treatment tanks (which look like water softener tanks, although I have very little idea what goes on inside them. They are rotated out by a contractor periodically when they become incapable of successfuly deionizing water, so perhaps the are analogous to softeners in that they need recharging ???), or how long it can sit in an open container, and still be "DI".
No idea on how a DO meter requires DI water.
"Live like you'll die tomorrow, but manage your grass like you'll live forever." -S. M. Stirling
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Joined: Nov 2007
Posts: 110
Lunker
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OP
Lunker
Joined: Nov 2007
Posts: 110 |
it calls for DI to mix the saline for the membrane. I also need it for some other lab stuff... Thanks for the input!
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Joined: Feb 2006
Posts: 210
Lunker
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Lunker
Joined: Feb 2006
Posts: 210 |
DI water is de-ionized water that has had all (read that as most) of the ions removed via ion exchange resin. The process uses cationic exchange media to remove cations (calcium, sodium, magnesium, etc) and exchange those with hydrogen ions (H+). It then send the water to anion exchange media beds to remove anions like chloride, sulfates, nitrates etc, and replaces with hydroxide (OH-). The result is an exchange of mineral ions with H+ and OH- to form H2O. The process is not 100% efficient, so the purity of the DI water is based on a lot of things. Usually 99.95% removal
Distilled water tries to accomplish the same thing using heat to distill off the pure water while leaving the salts behind. Based on the set up of the still and the level of possible distillable organics, the water will be essentially pure. It will be for all practical purposes, be equal to DI water.
Reverse Osmosis (RO) water uses a selective membrane to remove ions by utilizing overcoming the osmotic pressure of the water and pressuring the water through a membrane with pore size at the molecular size. The process is 99% efficient, so approximately 1% of the minerals still remain in the RO treated water. The home RO units you sometimes see used on kitchen faucets of under sinks do not produce the pressure needed to complete the process, so they are usually less than 80% removal of ions.
Soft water uses ion exchange as well, but only uses the cation exchange resin and uses sodium based resin instead of hydrogen form resin. Calcium and magnesium are exchanged with sodium (or potassium if you use KCL rather than NaCL where you might be on a low sodium diet).
The DO meter will be fine using distilled water bought in 1 gallon bottles at the grocery store.
Hope that helps.
Mike
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