FoxRox
Mechanical
- Feb 12, 2015
- 349
I am trying to figure out if it is possible to "tune" a water softener to produce less brine when it regenerates by sacrificing some of the effectiveness.
When a water softener regenerates, what is target "completion" for backwashing out all the calcium and magnesium ions? 100%? 99%? 90%? Do water softeners use more brine than necessary to get close to 100% ion exchange?
If the regeneration does not go to completion every time, would that have some negative long-term effect on the resin, or would it just reduce the effectiveness of the softener?
What does the curve of sodium ions vs hard water ions in the resin look like throughout a regeneration? Do most of the hard water ions get backwashed quickly and then the last few take a long time? i.e. Are there diminishing returns as the regeneration continues, or is it close to linear?
With my limited understanding of the chemistry, I hypothesize that you could use half the brine but still get more than half of the ions (hopefully a lot more than half). Additionally, the discharge itself would be less salty due to significant ion exchange occurring for the full duration of the regeneration cycle, rather than the tail end of the cycle being near 100% brine (if my hypothesis is correct).
Are there softeners out there that let you tweak settings like this, or is the amount of brine used always set from the factory and not adjustable?
Just for some background, I am trying to solve a problem where softener backwash is negatively affecting the performance of a septic tank. I can provide more details on that if someone wants to hear, but my primary question is about limiting brine discharge while still getting acceptable performance. Is there a tradeoff to be made, or am I completely off base with this idea?
When a water softener regenerates, what is target "completion" for backwashing out all the calcium and magnesium ions? 100%? 99%? 90%? Do water softeners use more brine than necessary to get close to 100% ion exchange?
If the regeneration does not go to completion every time, would that have some negative long-term effect on the resin, or would it just reduce the effectiveness of the softener?
What does the curve of sodium ions vs hard water ions in the resin look like throughout a regeneration? Do most of the hard water ions get backwashed quickly and then the last few take a long time? i.e. Are there diminishing returns as the regeneration continues, or is it close to linear?
With my limited understanding of the chemistry, I hypothesize that you could use half the brine but still get more than half of the ions (hopefully a lot more than half). Additionally, the discharge itself would be less salty due to significant ion exchange occurring for the full duration of the regeneration cycle, rather than the tail end of the cycle being near 100% brine (if my hypothesis is correct).
Are there softeners out there that let you tweak settings like this, or is the amount of brine used always set from the factory and not adjustable?
Just for some background, I am trying to solve a problem where softener backwash is negatively affecting the performance of a septic tank. I can provide more details on that if someone wants to hear, but my primary question is about limiting brine discharge while still getting acceptable performance. Is there a tradeoff to be made, or am I completely off base with this idea?