AAC (Autoclaved Aerated Concrete) in SUMP

Poseidon Black Sea

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Hello i have a question, anybody used AAC (Autoclaved Aerated Concrete) as a brick in the sump, basically like the marine brick , if so why? If not why?
 

MnFish1

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Hello i have a question, anybody used AAC (Autoclaved Aerated Concrete) as a brick in the sump, basically like the marine brick , if so why? If not why?
No - and why to use it? old rock works as well (assumedly)
 

taricha

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The porous structure sounds interesting, the autoclave part probably means it won't have to cure in water as much as normal concrete.
People say exposure to water is a weakness, but it's not clear if that's just due to freeze/ thaw destroying it or if the water over time actually degrades it.
 

Garf

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I was looking at aerated concrete a while back. I seem to remember surfactants being involved in the bubble formation / integrity until set.
 
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There won’t be any measurable benefit if you did use it in a reef tank because reef tanks don’t need extra surface area, they have an abundance already.
i am doing another tank and i tought i cold put it to grow some bacteria on it then move it to the second tank in the sump
 

brandon429

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Agreed it can be used to transfer seed any other system, but so can red bricks from a garage or a handful of pillow stuffing, or even a cupful of water from the established reef used in place of bottle bac

all that is the same as using the concrete, use whichever is easier. A cup of reef water is probably the easiest, it has lots of free bacteria.
 

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