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In spas & hot tubs, biofilms are more readily
noticed due to the warm water (over 90 degrees F) conditions that
typically exist. Bacteria is much more active at this temperature.
Even a spa that is brand new from the factory is most likely loaded with
biofilm due to the "wet testing" that most major spa manufacturers due
during the manufacturing of your spa. Moisture simply needs to be
in contact with spa surfaces for a short time before biofilms develop
and take hold. As the spa sits in a warehouse or in a truck during
transport, the biofilm grows & spreads. By the time your "brand
new" spa reaches you, there's significant growth if not total
infestation. We'll talk about what to do in a few minutes.
First, what is a biofilm? A biofilm is a film or large quantity
of bacteria that is living in and as a vast colony in the microscopic
world.
In
the "big" world, you could call a coral reef a "biofilm." A biofilm is
self-perpetuating and difficult to remove. Worst of all, biofilm love
virtually any surface, especially wet or damp. But beware, even after
drying out, the biofilm will not necessarily be dead but simply dormant.
Beyond that, biofilms are relatively resistant to chlorine, bromine &
other sanitizers.
Second, how do biofilms form? As just mentioned, biofilms form on
any surface. In your spa or hot tub that means the seats, walls, bottom,
skimmer baskets, filter cartridge and filter well, tank bodies, pump
bodies and impellers, jets, handles, lights, air holes, heater plumbing,
and especially the piping. There is a 5 steps process as to the
formation of biofilms: Attachment, Colonization,
Protection, Growth, and finally what we call Distribution.
Attachment is just that; the bacteria attaches to the surface. It
wants a place to call home and grow. Bacteria wants to be in
relationships, so they find a nice surface to settle down and join up
with a few of their closest friends.
After attaching to the hot tub surfaces with their friends,
Colonization takes place as bacteria multiply and divide, growing in
number. According to studies, it is at this crucial point that this
attachment is "irreversible." In other words, the biofilm is going
to grow no matter what. The bacteria colony is there to stay
unless purposefully removed. This stage is typically accomplished in a
matter of minutes or hours at most.
In the Protection stage, the bacteria colony or biofilm begins
protecting itself against invasion. Invasion from environmental factors,
"lethal" chemicals (such as chlorine or bromine), predators, anything
that wants to destroy it. In technical terms, the bacteria begins to
excrete a protective coating called an "exopolysaccharide" film. The
film is sticky or slimy and very hearty. Now the biofilm is ready to
experience explosive growth.
Growth of biofilms is, as mentioned before, like a coral reef,
the biofilm gets bigger and tougher. "Super colonies" of biofilm are
actually absorbing certain chemicals that were meant to destroy them.
The chlorine or bromine may kill the outer layers of the colony that
are
more susceptible to chlorine or bromine, but as the chlorine or bromine
is exhausted, the lower, stronger, better protected layers are still
living and multiplying. The good news is that as the biofilm colony
increases in size, it gets more "unwieldy" and begins to break apart.
That's also the bad news.
Now we come full circle to Distribution where these broken parts
begin to attach to other surfaces or different parts of the same
surface. And the cycle begins anew.
This article
continues
HERE.
Learn how to
remove biofilm here.
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If you still need help, here's how to
reach us:
Telephone (during
store hours): Stratford 203-377-0100 FAX: (24 hrs) 203-375-7787 Email:
techhelp@parpool-spa.com
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