HARDNESS OF WATER IN ABAKALIKI, EBONYI STATE - NIGERIA


WATER HARDNESS

Hard water is water that has high mineral content (in contrast with “ soft water”) hard water is generally not harmful to ones health, but can pose serous problems in industrial settings, where water hardness is monitored to avoid costly breakdowns in boilers calling towards, and other equipment that handles water. In domestic settings, hard water is often indicated by a lack of suds formation when soap is agitated in water. Wherever water hardness is a concern, water softening is commonly used to reduce had waters adverse effects.

SOURCES OF HARDNESS 

Waters hardness is determined by the concentration of multivalent cations in the water multivalent cations are cations (positively charged metal complexes with a charge greater than +1 usually, the cations have the charge of 2+. Common cations fount in hard water include Ca2+ and Mg2+. These ions enter a water supply by leaching from minerals with an aquifer.  Common calculus containing minerals are calcite and gypsum.  A common magnesium mineral is dolomite (which also contain calcium) rain water and distilled water are soft, because they also contain few ions. 

TEMPORARY HARDNESS

Temporary hardness is a type of water hardness caused by the presence of dissolved carbonate minerals (calcium carbonate). When dissolved these minerals yield calcium and magnesium  (Ca2+mg2+) and carbonate and bicarbonate anions (CO23-HCO3) the presence of the metal cations makes the water hard. However on like the permanent hardness caused by sulfate and chloride compounds, this “ temporary” hardness can be reduced either by building the water, or by the addition of line (calcium hydroxide) through the process of lime softening boiling promotes the formation of carbonate from the bicarbonate and precipitates calcium carbonate out of solution, leaving water that is softer upon cooling.
PERMANENT HARDNESS
Permanent hardness is hardness (mineral content) that cannot be removed by boiling. When this is the case, it is usually caused by the presence of calcium and magnesium sulphates and /or chlorides in the water, which become more soluble as the temperature increases. Despite the name, the hardness of the water can be easily removed using water softer or 10m exchange column.

EFFECTS OF HARD WATER
With hard water, soap solution’s from a white precipitates (soap scum) instead of producing lather; this effect arises because the 2+ ions destroy the surfactant properties of the soap by forming a solid precipitate (the soap scum). A major component of such scum is calcium stearate, which arises from sodium stearate, this mash component of soap.
Hardness can this be defined as the soap consuming capacity of a water sample, or the capacity of precipitation of soap as a characteristic property of water that prevents the lathering of soap. Synthetic detergents do not form such scums.

METHODS OF SOFTENING WATER 
1.      Water softening methods mainly rely on the removal of Ca2+ and Mg2+ from a solution or the sequestration of these ions i.e. binding them to a molecule that removes their ability to form scale or interfere with soap.
Removal is achieved by ion exchange and by precipitation methods. Sequestration entails the addition of chemical.
Compound called sequestration (or chelating agents) since ca2+ and Mg2+  exist as  non-volatile  salts, they can be removed by distillation.
2.      The use of ion exchange resin derives  ion –exchange materials contain sodium ion (Na+) that are electrostatically bound and that readily are replaced by hardness ions such as Ca2+ and Mg2+. Ion exchange resins are organic polymers containing anomic functional groups to which the Na+ is bound. Minerals called zeolites also exhibit ion- exchange properties:  These minerals are widely used in laundry detergents 
3.      Lime Softening:  Chelators are use used in chemical analysis as water softeners, and are ingredients in many commercial products such as shampoos and food preservative. Citric acid is used to soften water in soaps and laundry   detergents.  A commonly use synthetic chelator is EDTA. These are alterative to water softening 
i.                    Ion exchange 
ii.                  water purification
iii.                Descaling agent. 

DIFFERENCES BETWEEN  SOFT WATER AND HARD WATER

Hard water is water that contains an appreciable   quantify of dissolved minerals like (calcium and magnesium) 
Soft water is treated water in which only ion is sodium 
The hard water  is that  which does not lather  with soap  while  soft water is water that lather with soap
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