Swimming pools need chemicals to stay clean and balanced, but make no mistake, these chemicals can be dangerous. This article covers common pool chemicals and how to store them safely, as well as hazardous mistakes to avoid.
This article is mostly aimed at pool owners and operators, but if you are a design professional reading this, please consider these things when you are designing a natatorium. Separate storage rooms with plastic door handles and hinges, good ventilation, and overall storage space are critical for operator success and safety.
Chlorine needs to be stored separately from:
Mixing two types of chlorine together is often a fire/explosion hazard. Never mix or even store them near each other. As a rule of thumb, if they are two types of chlorine, they should not be in the same storage room, period. The vapors alone can cause a fire or explosion. In most commercial pools, primary chlorine is stored in a specific room, and if there is a secondary shock, like granular cal hypo, it is kept in either a different room, or at least 10 feet (~3 m) away. Good ventilation is key.
If chlorine and acid are mixed together, the fumes are toxic and potentially lethal. Acids, however, when sealed properly, can be stored in the same room as chlorine, provided there is sufficient ventilation and space between the chemicals. Commercial pools tend to use automated feeders for liquid acid and liquid chlorine, but we strongly recommend having these two chemicals in different rooms.
It is astounding how many commercial pump rooms are corroded beyond repair. This corrosion is the result of bad/insufficient ventilation and/or bad chemical storage practices. Both acid and chlorine have fumes that will destroy steel. If airborne chloramines can corrode 316L stainless steel in the natatorium, you don't have to imagine what pure acid and chlorine fumes will do to a pump room. We'll show you. Here are some photos:
These photos are just a taste of what can happen. Tens of thousands of dollars worth of equipment get rusted out because of bad ventilation and chemical storage practices. Keep that in mind if you're a pool owner or operator. It's probably worth looking at your storage practices and ventilation simply as an insurance policy against expensive damages. We have seen destroyed pumps, controllers, filters, valves, bolts, structural steel, and just about everything else metal.
An even better practice is to transfer dry products–like sodium bicarbonate, soda ash, sodium thiosulfate, etc.–into clean buckets with a lid. Clearly label the bucket, of course. Plastic buckets are far more durable than paper bags of products.
Let's face it: pools, pump rooms and chemical storage rooms often have wet floors. Use common sense and don't store cardboard or paper bags (like sodium bicarb or soda ash) on the ground. Plastic buckets, chemical drums and containers are fine on wet ground, but not containers that will deteriorate and get soggy. We have seen enough soaked bags of bicarb to know they are not fun to clean up. The best practice here is to store bags of bicarb on a pallet, or some other raised platform to keep the bags dry.
As an aside here, maintain the floor drains. We have been in many pump rooms that the drains are either clogged up or obstructed by debris. Keep them cleared and open so water can effectively drain.
Spill containment is very important as well. With liquids especially, chemicals can wreak havoc in a storage room or pump room. It's not so much "if" a liquid spills, it's more of a "when" it spills. Spills are virtually guaranteed to occur once in a while, so containment bins are a must-have.
To be fair, most commercial pools will not meet health code if the pump room and chemical storage rooms do not have locks. But believe it or not, we have seen pools without them! Check out the photo here where the staff cleverly used a 3/4" PVC pipe to keep the doors "locked". It's kind of funny, but more alarming than anything.
Safe pool chemical storage involves quite a few things. In no particular order:
If you follow these safety measures, risk is reduced, and everybody wins. Cutting corners leads to problems and costly equipment deterioration.