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Guide: Lanthanum Chloride dosing for Phosphate control

derek_SR

Supporting Member
DISCLAIMER: I am not a chemist, just a well-read hobbyist at best. Your experience and/or results may not be the same as what I describe here. Go slowly, pay attention to your tank, and know that there are always risks.

This topic seems to come up often enough, so rather than reference people to my tank journal all the time I figured I'd just write a brief guide. Rich Ross used this same method to lower his phosphates over an extended period of time and discussed it during an episode of Reef Beef (if anyone can tell me which - I'll update this with the specific episode). The Steinhart aquarium also uses it to control Po4, as do several other BAR members.

Side note #1: It's commonly believed that live rock "binds" phosphate, or "soaks it up" - equalizing with the level in the water over time. This means that as you lower the po4 level in your water, your rocks will leech some of what they have back into it - making it difficult to get them down, or even making it seem like lowering them isn't working at all. I can't speak to the science behind this or whether it is true or not, but it was 100% the experience I had. My Po4 was in the .75 range when I started, and I had to dose LaCl very heavily for several months while slowly tapering off the dose before it finally levelled out at my 0.15 target. Just FYI. While annoying when trying to make meaningful adjustments to your target, it acts a nice buffer once you're there to keep things stable.

Pros of LaCl dosing:
  • Very cheap
  • Low maintenance - no reactors to clean, nothing to change. One batch in a 2L dosing container lasts 13 months @ 5ml/day
  • Predictable and reliable - dosing precise quantities of a diluted solution makes it very easy to tune, compared with something like GFO
  • minimal impact to your water chemistry other than Po4 - it can lower alk slightly when bolus dosed, but this is not noticeable when slow dosing (in my experience)

Cons of LaCl dosing:
  • you need a dedicated dosing pump - especially if using the skimmer method (it CAN be dosed by hand, though, see below)
  • it is known to kill yellow tangs specifically (no idea why this is) if a significant quantity of unbound LaCl escapes into your tank - see side note #2

The skimmer method:
  1. Mix up a diluted batch of LaCl solution - I use a 1:100 dilution, and mix 15ml of LaCl into about 1500ml of RODI. It doesn't have to be diluted, but it makes it much safer and gives you some wiggle room as you dial in the dose. There's a handy calculator here, depending on the product you are using: http://larryl.emailplus.org.user.fm/fish/dosing-instructions-phosphate-removers.html
  2. Use the calculator above to identify your starting dose (I link to some common products at the end of this post) - targeting a specific daily po4 adjustment (e.g. - lower po4 by 0.1 per day). Given my side note above, you may be able to go with significantly larger doses initially if you find your rocks are leeching a lot of po4.
    • I recommend dosing slowly over time - especially as your Po4 gets lower, giving the LaCl time to bind with the phosphates in the skimmer body and get skimmed out. "Continuous duty" dosers are ideal, the Versa is a good example (and what I have used for some time).
  3. Run a silicone dosing tube from the LaCl pump directly down into the body of your skimmer, like so:
IMG_0295.jpg
The LaCl binds with the Po4 in the water inside the skimmer body - forming an inert particulate that gets skimmed out. Other ways to get it into your skimmer: 1. Dropper by hand, directly into the air inlet or skimmer body. 2. Dosed directly in front of the water pump intake 3. some skimmers have an ozone inlet (Reef Octo) and it can be dosed there. Note that you should inspect your pump periodically if dosing upstream of it.

I am personally using the skimmer method - and have progressed from 200ml/day of this 1:100 dilution initially (when I had very heavy po4 and my rocks were leeching it) down to just 5ml/day where I am currently to maintain my target of 0.15 phosphate. This equates to just 0.05ml of the actual LaCl product per day - a TINY amount needed to maintain my po4, and I feed HEAVILY and use no mechanical filtration. I see no lanthanum on my Triton ICP results.


Alternative methods:

Filter Sock - You can dose LaCl into a filter sock in your sump. It should be a 25-50micron sock (or smaller). You should still go slowly, as any unbound LaCl will pass through the sock and into the water column. Skimmer is much preferred, but if you are only dosing LaCl occasionally a filter sock could be easier. Note that it will clog fairly quickly so stay on top of it.​
Overflow and pray - Some people just dose LaCl directly into their overflow by hand, skipping the doser. I would only do this if you have fairly high po4, so that it all "binds" before making its way back up into the DT. The instructions on some of the LaCl products actually suggest doing this - so it's fairly safe, but see side note #2 below.​


Side note #2: As noted earlier, LaCl binds almost immediately to po4 - forming an inert solid. This particulate is not harmful, but it can settle in your sump over time if not skimmed out or filtered out. As your po4 starts approaching zero, though, the "unbound" raw LaCl can stay in the water column for longer periods of time looking for po4 - and one must be very careful when dosing it to very low levels of Po4. This, and/or dosing large quantities at once, is where the risk to your Yellow Tang comes in. Raw LaCl in the water can (anecdotally) be toxic to these fish, and will even show up on ICP. Go slow and keep it diluted! If you are targeting very low levels of po4, I recommend backing off of LaCl entirely lower than about 0.05 po4, which keeps you on the safe side of zero and beyond the error range of most test kits.


LaCl Products specifically for reef aquarium use:

**You can also use generic LaCl for lowering phosphate in pools - this is the cheapest route of all, but I would do further research to be confident in the purity of the product. Given how little of the stuff is required once your po4 is stabilized, I don't think the cost savings is worth it - even the name brand reef products are dirt cheap over time.
Side note #3: My intention is not for this guide to provide any perspective on WHERE you target your Po4 level, or to debate the merits of high vs low. I chose 0.15 simply as a number high enough to not worry about accidentally ever hitting zero. I also did not want my Po4 to raise forever - so I picked that target somewhat arbitrarily. I believe you can have a successful system at a wide range of Po4 levels - this is simply a tool to maintain it where you want it.

Happy Reefing!
 
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Awesome write up! LaCl is definitely my choice and has been for a long time. It's much simpler to use as I hate messing with reactors and changing media.
 
image.jpg

Here is what I noticed.
I dripped it into a 10 micron sock when I first started. It would clog the sock too quickly. Even tho I had 3 socks to rotate. It got old fast.
Then I dropped the tube 3/4 of the way down the skimmer. It worked fine for a while but I would notice a white buildup on the tube end like alk / Kalk build up. Eventually clogging up the tube end.
So this is what works for me. I cut the tube at a 45* angle. Drilled a hole into the outlet side of the skimmer motor side. The longest side of the tube faces the skimmer motor. So when the flow goes by. It will pull the lathinuim dose out of the tube.
 
View attachment 60803
Here is what I noticed.
I dripped it into a 10 micron sock when I first started. It would clog the sock too quickly. Even tho I had 3 socks to rotate. It got old fast.
Then I dropped the tube 3/4 of the way down the skimmer. It worked fine for a while but I would notice a white buildup on the tube end like alk / Kalk build up. Eventually clogging up the tube end.
So this is what works for me. I cut the tube at a 45* angle. Drilled a hole into the outlet side of the skimmer motor side. The longest side of the tube faces the skimmer motor. So when the flow goes by. It will pull the lathinuim dose out of the tube.
I just pull the air intake line off the silencer, add some drops down there then flush it by dipping the intake tube into the tank to suck up tank water. (Yes manually dosing by hand for now)
 
Very helpful write-up, thank you!

I’m curious about the comment that it doesn’t affect anything other than phosphate. I’ve read that it also lowers alkalinity (which isn’t a big deal). And before the newish data from ICP testing suggesting GFO depletes several trace elements, the same claims were made about GFO. Do you know of any backup to your statement?
 
How small of a skimmer can this work in?

PO4 is steadily rising, so far very slow but noticeable. So far just hit 0.05ppm, I'd like it between 0.15 and 0.03, target at 0.1. I will not be using LaCl until it hits 0.15 and keeps rising.

My skimmer is the bubble magus MiniQ, which i've shoved in my HOB to keep it out of the tank. I *could* run a tube into the neck, but with this size skimmer it might actually keep the lid from closing properly / obstruct flow. Diameter of the bubble-rising neck is like 1 inch at the top lol. This skimmer is 8 inches tall, and half of that is the collection cup + pump lol

Also, similar vein of "removing crap": I would like to run GAC in a pouch in my HOB for removing DOCs and contaminants (but not as a complete sub for WC), but I've been told it gets "saturated" quickly. Thus, should I be running a small amount constantly, swapping twice weekly? I don't really want to be rinsing, swapping, throwing away carbon all the time. I might make a post in BST looking for tiny spongy sump rubbles for this purpose as well lol
 
How small of a skimmer can this work in?

PO4 is steadily rising, so far very slow but noticeable. So far just hit 0.05ppm, I'd like it between 0.15 and 0.03, target at 0.1. I will not be using LaCl until it hits 0.15 and keeps rising.

My skimmer is the bubble magus MiniQ, which i've shoved in my HOB to keep it out of the tank. I *could* run a tube into the neck, but with this size skimmer it might actually keep the lid from closing properly / obstruct flow. Diameter of the bubble-rising neck is like 1 inch at the top lol. This skimmer is 8 inches tall, and half of that is the collection cup + pump lol

Also, similar vein of "removing crap": I would like to run GAC in a pouch in my HOB for removing DOCs and contaminants (but not as a complete sub for WC), but I've been told it gets "saturated" quickly. Thus, should I be running a small amount constantly, swapping twice weekly? I don't really want to be rinsing, swapping, throwing away carbon all the time. I might make a post in BST looking for tiny spongy sump rubbles for this purpose as well lol
With a 20g, you can fix your phosphates just by doing a 33-50% change, it's really easy. Just match temp and pH and you should be golden.
 
How small of a skimmer can this work in?

PO4 is steadily rising, so far very slow but noticeable. So far just hit 0.05ppm, I'd like it between 0.15 and 0.03, target at 0.1. I will not be using LaCl until it hits 0.15 and keeps rising.

My skimmer is the bubble magus MiniQ, which i've shoved in my HOB to keep it out of the tank. I *could* run a tube into the neck, but with this size skimmer it might actually keep the lid from closing properly / obstruct flow. Diameter of the bubble-rising neck is like 1 inch at the top lol. This skimmer is 8 inches tall, and half of that is the collection cup + pump lol

Also, similar vein of "removing crap": I would like to run GAC in a pouch in my HOB for removing DOCs and contaminants (but not as a complete sub for WC), but I've been told it gets "saturated" quickly. Thus, should I be running a small amount constantly, swapping twice weekly? I don't really want to be rinsing, swapping, throwing away carbon all the time. I might make a post in BST looking for tiny spongy sump rubbles for this purpose as well lol
Drill a hole for the tube in the cap of skimmer but def go slow dosing . Aggree above dilution is the solution with 20g instead of chemical band aid that is if you've exhausted other avenues keeping P04 in check or know the reason
 
I just pull the air intake line off the silencer, add some drops down there then flush it by dipping the intake tube into the tank to suck up tank water. (Yes manually dosing by hand for now)
Some skimmers (Reef Octo) have an inlet for ozone and it can also be dosed directly there, although I haven't tried it yet - I am worried about mucking up the pump. I updated the post to include this option as well as @Arvin R 's method and @Turkeysammich 's method.
 
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Very helpful write-up, thank you!

I’m curious about the comment that it doesn’t affect anything other than phosphate. I’ve read that it also lowers alkalinity (which isn’t a big deal). And before the newish data from ICP testing suggesting GFO depletes several trace elements, the same claims were made about GFO. Do you know of any backup to your statement?
Thanks John, I think you are right - my statement was too bold and I've updated the post. I don't notice any drop in alkalinity when slow dosing the diluted product - but it may be noticeable when performing larger doses by hand. I've also added a disclaimer :)
 
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How small of a skimmer can this work in?

PO4 is steadily rising, so far very slow but noticeable. So far just hit 0.05ppm, I'd like it between 0.15 and 0.03, target at 0.1. I will not be using LaCl until it hits 0.15 and keeps rising.

My skimmer is the bubble magus MiniQ, which i've shoved in my HOB to keep it out of the tank. I *could* run a tube into the neck, but with this size skimmer it might actually keep the lid from closing properly / obstruct flow. Diameter of the bubble-rising neck is like 1 inch at the top lol. This skimmer is 8 inches tall, and half of that is the collection cup + pump lol

Also, similar vein of "removing crap": I would like to run GAC in a pouch in my HOB for removing DOCs and contaminants (but not as a complete sub for WC), but I've been told it gets "saturated" quickly. Thus, should I be running a small amount constantly, swapping twice weekly? I don't really want to be rinsing, swapping, throwing away carbon all the time. I might make a post in BST looking for tiny spongy sump rubbles for this purpose as well lol
I tend to agree with Thomas in that water changes in a tank that small are the easiest/cheapest/safest way to do most anything. But I don't see why a small skimmer wouldn't work, as long as the skimmer is effective (some small ones aren't really).

Here's a couple more article series on DOC/GAC and may inform how often you want to change your carbon and so on:

https://reefs.com/magazine/total-organic-carbon-toc-and-the-reef-aquarium-an-initial-survey-part-i/

and

 
lol. I understand water changes being great, and especially since I’ve gotten much better results recently by performing more frequent water changes, I’m probably not going to stop.

Was just very curious about this process and whether it could be used on a tiny tank with a tiny skimmer. :)

Thank you @derek_SR for the great write-up
 
Regarding the skimmer approach, is the benefit that the skimmer actually skims out the particulates or that it tries to heavily mix the LC with tank water before it could get back into the sump? I assume the answer is a bit of both, but I'm guessing the main benefit is that longer mix time.

The mix time meaning the LC hopefully gets really mixed through water before some of it gets into the sump, but also the release to the sump won't be all at once because some will self-recirculate. My guess is that's more important than all of it really getting bubbled out (which presumably isn't guaranteed).

Separately, does anyone know how LC & carbon interplay? I'm wondering why put it in a skimmer versus put it in a carbon reactor. I'm guessing it'd plug up the reactor based on the comments about it plugging filter socks?
 
Regarding the skimmer approach, is the benefit that the skimmer actually skims out the particulates or that it tries to heavily mix the LC with tank water before it could get back into the sump? I assume the answer is a bit of both, but I'm guessing the main benefit is that longer mix time.

The mix time meaning the LC hopefully gets really mixed through water before some of it gets into the sump, but also the release to the sump won't be all at once because some will self-recirculate. My guess is that's more important than all of it really getting bubbled out (which presumably isn't guaranteed).

Separately, does anyone know how LC & carbon interplay? I'm wondering why put it in a skimmer versus put it in a carbon reactor. I'm guessing it'd plug up the reactor based on the comments about it plugging filter socks?

It's both - it allows for plenty of active contact time and then gets skimmed out. It's a pretty fine particulate - I notice it around my skimmer cup and accumulated slightly on the walls of the skimmer, it tends to cling to stuff.
 
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