benchtester
Mechanical
- Feb 7, 2010
- 1
(Please excuse a newbies cross-posting. I first put this in Process Development, but I think this is a better forum.)
This probably sounds strange but I want to cause scale. I want to build a test bed to compare different pumps and their relative ability to tolerate scale that might occur in drinking water systems. While I would like to accelerate the rate of buildup; it would also be fairly important to have the areas of precipitation to be similar to real world systems. For example, would there be less scale in high flow areas and more in stagnate areas? I wouldn't want to precipitate free particles in the fluid stream (unless this too happens in real life).
I am a mechanical engineer with a fairly limited background in chemistry. So feel free to "talk-down" to me in the answer. What would the best salts to use? Should I start a little acidic and then adjust the PH higher over the test period?
This probably sounds strange but I want to cause scale. I want to build a test bed to compare different pumps and their relative ability to tolerate scale that might occur in drinking water systems. While I would like to accelerate the rate of buildup; it would also be fairly important to have the areas of precipitation to be similar to real world systems. For example, would there be less scale in high flow areas and more in stagnate areas? I wouldn't want to precipitate free particles in the fluid stream (unless this too happens in real life).
I am a mechanical engineer with a fairly limited background in chemistry. So feel free to "talk-down" to me in the answer. What would the best salts to use? Should I start a little acidic and then adjust the PH higher over the test period?