Yes, HEDP·Na4 can replace HEDP·K2 in many standard water treatment formulations, but it is not a drop-in replacement. Because they have different cation properties and significantly different pH profiles, a direct substitution requires formulation adjustments.
To determine if the swap will work for your specific application, you need to weigh the technical trade-offs between the two salts:
1. The pH and Alkalinity Difference (Crucial for Formulating)
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HEDP·Na4 (Tetrasodium Salt): This is a highly alkaline salt. A 1% aqueous solution typical yields a pH between 10.0 and 12.0. Adding it directly will significantly raise the pH of your system or concentrate.
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HEDP·K2 (Dipotassium Salt): This is a partially neutralized, nearly neutral salt. A 1% aqueous solution sits at a pH of 6.0 to 8.0.
Formulation Impact: If you replace HEDP·K2 with HEDP·Na4, you will likely need to introduce an acid (like local HEDP acid or H2SO4) to adjust the final formulation pH back down to your target specifications.
2. Solubility Limits under Neutral Conditions
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Potassium vs. Sodium Advantage: Potassium salts naturally possess significantly higher solubility than sodium salts near neutral pH. At 20°C, HEDP·K2 has roughly three times the solubility of comparable sodium salts in neutral media.
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Winter/Cold Climate Risks: If you are formulating high-concentration liquid blends, replacing the potassium salt with the tetrasodium salt can lead to crystal precipitation or layering in cold storage conditions. HEDP·Na4 powder is highly prone to deliquescence, but in liquid blends, the sodium ions can limit upper concentration thresholds compared to potassium.
3. High-Stress and Low-Sodium Application Restrictions
There are specific industrial environments where HEDP·K2 is chosen deliberately over sodium salts:
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High-Pressure Boilers: Systems requiring ultra-low sodium levels to prevent turbine carryover and caustic gouging cannot accept the high sodium load introduced by HEDP·Na4.
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High-Temperature Systems: While both offer excellent thermal stability up to 250°C, HEDP·K2 performs more reliably in high-salinity, high-temperature cooling water without forming insoluble sodium-organophosphonate precipitates.
Comparison Summary
| Characteristic | HEDP·K2 (Dipotassium) | HEDP·Na4 (Tetrasodium) | Replacement Impact |
| Physical State (Typical) | Liquid (26% – 30% active) | Liquid or White Powder | Adjust active content calculations. |
| 1% Solution pH | 6.0 – 8.0 (Neutral) | 10.0 – 12.0 (Alkaline) | Will drastically raise system pH. |
| Solubility (Neutral pH) | Excellent (>230 g/L) | Moderate (Risk of precipitation) | Lower blending limits in cold climates. |
| Calcium Carbonate Inhibition | High | High | Equivalent chelation mechanism. |
| Cost Profile | Higher | Lower | Significant raw material savings. |
Summary Recommendation
If you are treating standard low-to-medium pressure boilers, swimming pools, or typical industrial cooling loops, you can switch to HEDP·Na4 to reduce raw material costs. However, you must monitor the blending order, correct the formulation’s final pH, and check for winter crystallization stability if formulating a liquid concentrate.
