Tune irrigation water with precise acid dosing. Choose acid type, strength, and safety factor quickly. Get clear results, then download a tidy report file.
Sample scenario to show typical inputs and the computed dose.
| Scenario | Water Volume | Alkalinity (Current → Target) | Acid | Acid Properties (%, density, eq/mol) | Calculated Dose |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Example A | 1,000 L | 200 → 60 mg/L as CaCO₃ | Sulfuric acid (H₂SO₄) | 93.0%, 1.84 g/mL, 2.0 eq/mol |
80.24 mL
8.02 mL per 100 L
|
1 Convert alkalinity reduction to milliequivalents:
2 Calculate acid normality (if using properties):
3 Compute dose:
This approach targets alkalinity neutralization. Final pH depends on buffering and should be verified with measurement.
Alkalinity is the water’s buffering capacity, commonly reported as mg/L (ppm) as CaCO3. Many wells and municipal supplies fall between 50 and 200 mg/L. When alkalinity is high, nutrient solutions can drift upward in pH and reduce micronutrient availability. This calculator sizes an acid dose to reduce alkalinity toward a target you select.
Acids vary by concentration, density, and how many hydrogen equivalents they provide. A stronger label concentration does not always mean a larger effect per milliliter if density differs. Using the “Acid properties” method, the tool converts concentration and density into normality (eq/L) so different acids can be compared consistently.
The dose is based on how much alkalinity you want to neutralize: (current − target) × volume. In water chemistry, 1 meq/L equals 50 mg/L as CaCO3. For example, lowering alkalinity by 40 mg/L is 0.8 meq/L. Multiply by your tank volume in liters to get total milliequivalents to neutralize.
Start conservatively. A safety factor of 0.70–0.90 is typical for first adjustments, especially when your test kit has uncertainty or the water source changes. Add acid to water (never the reverse), mix thoroughly, then re-test. For drip systems, inject in small increments and monitor emitter performance.
After treatment, verify both alkalinity and pH. pH responds quickly, while alkalinity reflects true neutralization. If the measured alkalinity remains above target, increase the next dose slightly; if you overshoot, reduce it and record the new baseline. Aim for small steps; a 10–20 mg/L correction is easier to manage than large swings. Keeping a log of source alkalinity, temperature, and dose improves repeatability across seasons.
Yes. For dilute water solutions, 1 ppm is approximately 1 mg/L. When labs report alkalinity as CaCO3, enter that value directly as mg/L (ppm) as CaCO3.
Real systems have mixing losses, test variability, and changing source water. The safety factor lets you start lower, confirm results, and then scale up confidently without overshooting the target alkalinity.
You can, but vinegar is weak and often requires large volumes, which may be impractical for tanks. Use the custom acid option if you know the vinegar concentration and want an estimate.
Alkalinity is the better control variable for stable nutrient solutions. pH can rebound if buffering remains high. Use pH measurements to confirm, but size the dose using alkalinity reduction.
Convert your result to mg/L as CaCO3 using your kit’s chart, then enter that value. If the kit provides meq/L, multiply by 50 to get mg/L as CaCO3.
Use the product label or safety data sheet. Enter weight percent and density as listed. If your acid is diluted on-site, use the final concentration and measure density if precision is required.
Slightly. Density and reaction behavior can shift with temperature, especially for concentrated acids. For routine garden dosing, the effect is usually small, but re-check alkalinity after mixing for best accuracy.
Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.