DWC water temperature vs DO

h0m3b0Y

Member
Hi all

New here, also new to growing, so please be gentle.

I have been reading up on DWC for white a while and I'm terribly puzzled with the whole DO and temperatures.

Just about any site will quote you that perfect DWC temperatures are above 16°C (62F), because plants don't really like cold that much, and below 20°C (68F), because apparently dissolved oxygen drops too low. There is almost always an extra warning that temperatures above 21°C will just about suffocate any plant, since dissolved oxygen drops "very fast".

So I did a google search :cool:. It appears that solubility of oxygen is quite well studied, since the ocean people use for the science thingy. It is also quite handy, that ocean temperatures ranges from 0°C to 35-ish °C, and vary in salt concentration as well.

So here is a simple chart one can find on google:

Here is similar info in table form:

If I'm reading this right, there is no magical "dip" of DO above 21°C. Not even a hiccup. The difference in DO between 20°C (68F) and 25°C (77F) is very very small (0.6 ppm).
Furthermore, them more dissolved salts in the water, the bigger the drop in DO. This drop seems much larger then temperature one. So if you use more nutes and lots of additives, your DO will suffer accordingly.

Another google hit states that 4ppm DO is about minimum for many plants to survive, with 7-10ppm being "normally maintained" with extra note that higher DO does not have any advantages for plants. So 25°C should be just fine as far as DO goes. (for those non-metric...ly inclined, 1 mg/L equals 1 ppm). Even if you go to 35°C (and not cook your plants), you would still have more than 4ppm of DO as long as your nutes are below 35-ish ‰.

So my question would be: is there an explanation, preferably a scientific one, why would DO at 21°C or above be deadly (suffocating) for DWC? Let's disregard other problems caused by high temperatures (root rot, etc.) and stick to DO vs Temp.

I'm not trying to stir shit up or be a smart ass since my growing experience is very limited to say the least, but I really like to (over)plan all my project and this one just bugs me. Are the temperatures quoted everywhere a part of folklore that just get repeated over and over again, or is there any substance behind those claims?
 

Yande

Well-Known Member
The charts are referring to Salt Water.. Wondering how these figures compare to just plain water.
Where does the 16C - 20C range come from?
 

SnidleyBluntash

Well-Known Member
I believe it has as well to do with bad things growing in the water if the temperature is too high. DO is just one reason to keep the temp low.
 

Delps8

Well-Known Member
So my question would be: is there an explanation, preferably a scientific one, why would DO at 21°C or above be deadly (suffocating) for DWC? Let's disregard other problems caused by high temperatures (root rot, etc.) and stick to DO vs Temp.
Where did you read "DO at 21°C or above be deadly (suffocating) for DWC?"

I'm not trying to stir shit up or be a smart ass since my growing experience is very limited to say the least, but I really like to (over)plan all my project and this one just bugs me. Are the temperatures quoted everywhere a part of folklore that just get repeated over and over again, or is there any substance behind those claims?
Perhaps.
 

HydroLynx

Well-Known Member
Hi all

New here, also new to growing, so please be gentle.

I have been reading up on DWC for white a while and I'm terribly puzzled with the whole DO and temperatures.

Just about any site will quote you that perfect DWC temperatures are above 16°C (62F), because plants don't really like cold that much, and below 20°C (68F), because apparently dissolved oxygen drops too low. There is almost always an extra warning that temperatures above 21°C will just about suffocate any plant, since dissolved oxygen drops "very fast".

So I did a google search :cool:. It appears that solubility of oxygen is quite well studied, since the ocean people use for the science thingy. It is also quite handy, that ocean temperatures ranges from 0°C to 35-ish °C, and vary in salt concentration as well.

So here is a simple chart one can find on google:

Here is similar info in table form:

If I'm reading this right, there is no magical "dip" of DO above 21°C. Not even a hiccup. The difference in DO between 20°C (68F) and 25°C (77F) is very very small (0.6 ppm).
Furthermore, them more dissolved salts in the water, the bigger the drop in DO. This drop seems much larger then temperature one. So if you use more nutes and lots of additives, your DO will suffer accordingly.

Another google hit states that 4ppm DO is about minimum for many plants to survive, with 7-10ppm being "normally maintained" with extra note that higher DO does not have any advantages for plants. So 25°C should be just fine as far as DO goes. (for those non-metric...ly inclined, 1 mg/L equals 1 ppm). Even if you go to 35°C (and not cook your plants), you would still have more than 4ppm of DO as long as your nutes are below 35-ish ‰.

So my question would be: is there an explanation, preferably a scientific one, why would DO at 21°C or above be deadly (suffocating) for DWC? Let's disregard other problems caused by high temperatures (root rot, etc.) and stick to DO vs Temp.

I'm not trying to stir shit up or be a smart ass since my growing experience is very limited to say the least, but I really like to (over)plan all my project and this one just bugs me. Are the temperatures quoted everywhere a part of folklore that just get repeated over and over again, or is there any substance behind those claims?
DO solubility vs water temps is misleading. Plant roots will simply metablolise and burn oxygen MUCH faster at 25C than at 16C. That's one of the biggest reasons why you need to chill roots in all water-culture imo. After all there is only a 1.7ppm DO dip between 25C and 16C, that's really not that much to actually make the big difference to the plant we see, if you think about it...
Extra agitation also causes the plant to deplete DO faster than it can be replaced (acc to a study I read), so go easy on the pumps and bubblers, well there's an opitmal balance.
 

HydroLynx

Well-Known Member
I spent 2 hours looking on Google scholar, can't find. But it is well established that over agitation of water around roots creates issues. I think it's because the roots get access to too many nutes and suck up up DO faster than it can be replace, am not 100% sure tho.
 

HydroLynx

Well-Known Member
Here's the best one I had on disk. This study found that there was a Goldilocks zone for DO: too little = problems, and too much DO also = problems such as brown roots. Check it out...
 

Attachments

Top