I decided to attempt to build this. I am going to give Taps Plastic a call tomorrow and see if I can get some of the parts fabricated in the way I want, here are a few ideas I had. I think I might be able to improve upon the design using my knowledge of aquarium filters. I know hardly anything about these types of systems when it comes to scrubbing, so I am hoping that if I am in error, in my thinking, someone will please correct me.
Right above the drain valve I was thinking of putting another valve that would ensure water flow was cut going up the blue pipe so that the pump can be used to pump the waste water out of the reservoir. The valve already in that line should be kept, but I think making the T off the valve threaded, so a chemical resistant hose or spout can be screwed in, might come in handy.
Splitting the reservoir tank down the middle with a sheet of PVC or Polypropylene sheet to just below where the water line would be so that the water can still move back and forth through the reservoir, just not the air. The red air line coming into the tank from the hood would go through this separator to the opposite side of the chamber from the access port. The red water pipe coming down into the reservoir tank, that T's with the air coming in from the hood would also go under the water line just like in the diagram, but not as low as the sheet of plastic that splits the reservoir in half.
The reason for this design is to keep the plastic balls in the next modification from moving to the access port side.
In the side of the reservoir opposite the access port, fill that side with bio balls used in salt water reef tank filters. The idea behind that it breaks up the bubbles even smaller as they pass through them, and it slows the bubbles travel time to the surface down a considerable amount. Plus, some bubbles will collect on the plastic balls and stay for awhile. The plastic bio balls look like this.
This is the part I feel I may be wrong about, but I would like to know if it's totally off base or may work. I think the chamber that has the spray head requires some room to react with whatever gas is left over, but I would also like to fill this chamber about halfway with the same bio balls, my thinking is this. As the balls get wet, the droplets of water will capture some of the outgas from the reservoir, when the droplets collect and become heavy enough they will make their way back down into the reservoir.
I like the idea of the viewing port in the 12 ducting pipe, I am going to see if Taps plastic has any clear plastic tubing that is acid resistant (polypropylene?) that can either be inserted in the middle so that you have a clear view all the way through, or that the entire length of the pipe can be made from.
For the reservoir I am thinking of using a 55 gallon DI water barrel, I can purchase them used from the place I purchase my Nitric Acid for $10 a piece. They are made out of a super heavy duty plastic that is about 1/4 inch thick, much better than plastic garbage cans, I currently use them to throw the recycle scrap I don't process into, like aluminum, etc. I think this would work perfectly, the lid is plastic welded air tight. I think just simply cutting a hole in the top for the 12 inch Conduit would work.
At the bottom of the reservoir tank I am thinking about putting in air stones, with a small aquarium air pump and tubing outside the chamber pumping air into the air stone inside the chamber. My thinking is this. The outgas coming into the reservoir is negative charged, the air coming out of the air stone is positive charged. As the two react with each other the negative charged outgase ions will be attracted to the positive charge air bubbles and will jump from the outgas air bubbles, to the outside of the positive charged air bubbles so that when they pop on the surface of the water, they let the negative charged ions go to be absorbed into the water instead of rising to the top of the 12 inch pipe.
Putting a 500gph submersible aquarium pump at the bottom of the reservoir, pointing in such a way as to make the water, with air bubbles, move in a circular pattern, keeping the bubbles in the water even longer. And even better, more cost effective and energy efficient way of doing this would be to simply angle the red water line entering the reservoir so that it makes the water mixed with the outgas follow the inside wall of the reservoir thus creating a similar swirling effect and keeping the bubbles suspended in the water longer.
Okay, have at, critic the hell out of my ideas please, but be constructive so that I can learn from any mistakes I made in my thinking.
And thank you!