The dosage of ATMP (Aminotris(methylenephosphonic acid)) as a scale inhibitor is not a single number but depends on a wide range of factors.
Always consult the specific technical data sheet (TDS) from your supplier and consider performing a compatibility test (jar test) with your actual system water for the most accurate dosage.
Here is a comprehensive guide to determining the correct dosage of ATMP.
Key Factors Influencing ATMP Dosage
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Water Chemistry: The most critical factor. The levels of calcium, magnesium, barium, alkalinity, pH, and total dissolved solids (TDS) directly determine scaling potential.
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System Type: Operating conditions (temperature, pressure, contact time) vary greatly between systems.
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Target Scale: Is the primary concern calcium carbonate, calcium sulfate, barium sulfate, or a mix?
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Concentration Factor (Cycles of Concentration): In cooling systems, as water evaporates, minerals become more concentrated. Higher cycles require higher inhibitor dosage.
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Presence of other chemicals: ATMP is often used in formulations with other inhibitors (e.g., HEDP, PBTC) or polymers for synergistic effects.
Typical Dosage Ranges by Application
ATMP is almost always fed continuously to the system to maintain a constant, low concentration.
1. Cooling Water Systems (Open Recirculating)
This is the most common application. Dosage is based on holding a specific residual level of ATMP in the water.
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Initial Dosage (for first fill or after cleanup): 20 – 100 mg/L
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This provides a high initial dose to clean the system and establish a protective film.
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Maintenance (Continuous Feed) Dosage: 2 – 20 mg/L (as active product)
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Low Hardness Water: 2-10 mg/L
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High Hardness/High Scaling Water: 10-20+ mg/L
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Goal: Maintain a residual concentration of 1 – 5 mg/L of ATMP in the system water. This is often monitored using a phosphonate test kit (Hach, etc.).
2. Boiler Water Treatment
Used to control carbonate and sulfate scale, especially in low-pressure boilers.
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Dosage Range: 1 – 10 mg/L (as active product) into the feedwater.
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Note: For high-pressure boilers, other chemistries are often preferred due to potential thermal degradation of phosphonates, though ATMP is more stable than many older phosphonates.
3. Reverse Osmosis (RO) & Desalination Systems
Used as an antiscalant in the feedwater to prevent scale on membranes.
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Dosage Range: 2 – 10 mg/L (as active product)
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Critical: A pretreatment compatibility test is essential. Overdosing can lead to fouling from the precipitation of ATMP with calcium (calcium-ATMP salt).
4. Oilfield Water Treatment (Squeeze Application)
In oil and gas production, a concentrated “pill” of scale inhibitor is injected (“squeezed”) into the formation to prevent downhole scale.
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Dosage: This is a highly specialized operation. Concentrations are very high (5-20% active solutions), and the volume is calculated based on formation geology and water volume. This must be designed by a specialist.
Important Calculation: Dilution and Feed Rate
ATMP is typically sold as a liquid concentrate (e.g., 50% active content). You need to dilute it and set a feed pump rate.
Formula:
Feed Rate (L/hr) = (System Flow Rate (m³/hr) * Desired Dose (mg/L) * 0.001) / (Product Concentration (%) * 10)
Example:
You have a cooling system with a recirculation flow rate of 1000 m³/hr. You want to maintain a 5 mg/L dose of active ATMP. Your product is a 50% solution.
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Calculate the amount of active ATMP needed per hour:
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1000 m³/hr * 5 g/m³ (because 5 mg/L = 5 g/m³) = 5000 g/hr
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Calculate the amount of commercial product (50%) needed:
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5000 g/hr / (0.50) = 10,000 g/hr = 10 kg/hr
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If your product is diluted (e.g., you have a 10% solution):
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5000 g/hr / (0.10) = 50,000 g/hr = 50 kg/hr
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This is why using a concentrated product is often more practical.
Critical Precautions & Best Practices
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Overdosing Risk: Excessive ATMP can itself form a calcium-ATMP precipitate, causing scale. More is not better.
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pH Sensitivity: ATMP is most effective in a neutral to alkaline pH range (pH 7-9.5). Its performance can decrease in highly acidic conditions.
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Chlorine Tolerance: ATMP is not highly stable under strong oxidizers like chlorine. If chlorination is used, a stabilizer or a more oxidizer-resistant inhibitor like PBTC might be needed.
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Compatibility: Ensure it is compatible with corrosion inhibitors (e.g., zinc salts can precipitate) and other chemicals in your program.
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Jar Testing: The gold standard. Simulate your system’s water chemistry and temperature in a lab to determine the minimum effective dosage before full-scale application.
In summary, start with a dosage in the range of 5-10 mg/L for a cooling system, but the final dosage MUST be determined by testing your specific water and monitoring the residual inhibitor level and scaling tendency.