CO2 -
Atemkalk-
ABSORBENS-
Bergwerk
vs.
Höhle
In practice, many divers use their scrubber over several dives. Once charged, they note the operating time - and store the scrubber until the next use. Sounds logical, doesn't it?
But a study by Pollock et al. (2018) shows: This is riskier than many people think. And the crucial processes do not take place visibly, but quietly - inside your limescale container.
Why does quicklime age at all?
The scrubber - i.e. the container with breathing lime (usually Sofnolime 797™) - is the heart of every rebreather. Its task is to chemically bind CO₂ from the exhaled gas before it returns to the diver.
This works via a multi-stage reaction with sodium and calcium hydroxide:
1. CO₂ reagiert mit Wasser und bildet Kohlensäure.
2. Diese reagiert mit Natriumhydroxid und wird zu Natriumkarbonat.
3. Dieses wiederum reagiert mit Calciumhydroxid – übrig bleibt: Calciumkarbonat (Kalkstein), Wasser und Wärme.
The decisive factor here is that the reaction needs moisture to take place.
Das heißt aber auch: Feuchtigkeit aktiviert den Scrubber. Und die zieht der Kalk aus der Luft, sobald du den Kreislauf öffnest oder der Behälter nicht luftdicht verschlossen ist.
What looks dry can react long ago.
What did the study investigate?
How strongly does the type of storage influence the subsequent CO₂ absorption performance of an already used scrubber?
To do this, they packed the lime into an Evolution Plus™ rebreather system under realistic conditions, operated it for 90 minutes under a controlled CO₂ supply and then stored the scrubbers under three conditions:
1. Offen an Luft (für 28 Tage)
2. Luftdicht vakuumversiegelt (ebenfalls 28 Tage)
3. Offen, aber nur über Nacht
After the storage period, the canisters were returned to the test system - and continued to run until the CO₂ content of the breathing air reached 1 kPa (critical breakthrough value).
The results
Open storage - 28 days
Average running time after storage: 188 minutes
→ Significantly reduced performance
Sealed storage - 28 days
Average running time: 241 minutes
→ Almost full capacity retained
Open overnight
Average: 239 minutes
→ No significant impairment
In other words:
Stored open = 53 minutes shorter operating time
Or: 100 liters less CO₂ absorbed
Das ist nicht nur ein technischer Unterschied. This is a security gap.
Note: Die oben genannten Laufzeiten stellen keine Empfehlung dar. Die Untersuchung wurde unter Laborbedingungen durchgeführt und diente ausschließlich dem Zweck, Rückschlüsse auf die bestmögliche Lagerung von Kalk zu gewinnen – nicht, um die maximale Laufzeit von Kalk zu ermitteln.
The exact causes are complex, but there are two main hypotheses:
1. Reaktion mit Luftfeuchtigkeit:
Air contains CO₂ (albeit little) and moisture. Breathing lime stored openly continues to react - slowly but constantly. The chemical conversion is ongoing. This reduces the subsequent capacity.
2. Austrocknung:
The reaction only works with water. If the lime dries out - for example in air-conditioned rooms with low humidity - it loses its efficiency.
Paradoxically, too much or too little moisture can therefore be a problem.
In the test, the humidity was around 53 %. In drier rooms (winter, air conditioning, heated drying cellar?) the effect could be even greater.
What does that mean for you as a diver?
If you have a partially used scrubber:
✅ Avoid open storage for several days.
✅ Use vacuum bags or airtight containers.
✅ Use Scrubber as soon as possible after packing.
✅ If you store overnight, "open" is fine - but here too: better airtight.
✅ If in doubt: replace the filling. A new filling may cost you 20 €, but a CO₂ breakthrough is priceless - in the worst case with your life.
Mistakes you should avoid
• „Der Scrubber ist doch nicht nass – da kann nichts passiert sein.“
→ Wrong. Hygroscopy means: even the air is enough.
• „Ich lager das im Rebreather mit verschlossenen Stopfen.“
→ Sounds good, but blind plugs are not airtight. And there is often residual moisture in the appliance.
• „Ich merk doch, wenn der Kalk verbraucht ist.“
→ No. The rise in CO₂ comes on gradually. By the time you feel it, it's often too late - or you confuse the symptoms with stress, cold or tiredness.
Conclusion - Your scrubber is not a battery
A scrubber does not store energy on demand. It is a chemical system that reacts as soon as it is activated. This activation happens not only during diving, but also during storage - quietly, invisibly and irreversibly.
Remember:
What looks dry may have been used up long ago.
And: safety doesn't start when you descend, but when you pack.
Are you traveling with the rebreather for several days at a time? Then overnight storage is crucial. The study shows that storing it open overnight is not critical - but the same applies here: protect it airtight if possible.
Source:
Pollock NW, Gant N, Harvey D, et al. Storage of partly used closed-circuit rebreather carbon dioxide absorbent canisters. Diving and Hyperbaric Medicine. 2018;48(2):96–101.
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