Do you mean that adding a little chlorine made the reading go from 0 to a higher level? You should shock your pool once a week with 1L of liquid chlorine per 10000L of water in your pool. You need to add enough chlorine to break apart the combine chlorine (the combination of chlorine and dirt which doesn't sanitize.) If you don't add enough at once, it will be used up and the chlorine reading will remain low.
Depends on the type of chlorine you are using as each type of chlorine product has it's own pH level. i.e Liquid chlorine (sodium hypochlorite) has a natural pH of about 14. Trichlo products have a pH of about 3 Dichlor products have a pH of about 6.8 Gas Chlorine has a pH of <1 So based on the above lets say you are using liquid chlorine in a concrete pool, the pH will tend to be high (alkaline) due to the high pH of the chlorine product coupled with the fact the pool is concrete.
Chlorine gas is liquefied by cooling and pressurizing it.
density difference is decreasing when the temperature rises with liquid chlorine.
Have you actually added liquid chlorine to the pool?
The boiling point of chlorine is -34,04 oC.The melting point of chlorine is - 101,5 oC.
we used liquid chlorine to raise ours so far it has worked
Depends on the type of chlorine you are using as each type of chlorine product has it's own pH level. i.e Liquid chlorine (sodium hypochlorite) has a natural pH of about 14. Trichlo products have a pH of about 3 Dichlor products have a pH of about 6.8 Gas Chlorine has a pH of <1 So based on the above lets say you are using liquid chlorine in a concrete pool, the pH will tend to be high (alkaline) due to the high pH of the chlorine product coupled with the fact the pool is concrete.
No, under normal conditions chlorine is a gas.
Chlorine is an insulator since it is a liquid base.
Chlorine gas is liquefied by cooling and pressurizing it.
density difference is decreasing when the temperature rises with liquid chlorine.
chlorine can only change from a liquid to a gas-which is by the process of evapouration. it cannot be a soild
A liquid without electrolytes, such as sodium, chlorine.
Have you actually added liquid chlorine to the pool?
Yes, at higher pressure and/or low temperature chlorine is a liquid.
A liquid without electrolytes, such as sodium, chlorine.
Chlorine is a gas at room temperature.