Chlorine Breakdown in Sunlight

Sunlight’s ultraviolet energy breaks apart hypochlorous acid and related chlorine species, which is why outdoor pools lose sanitizer fast unless cyanuric acid (CYA) slows that photolysis.

The mechanism

Free chlorine in water exists mainly as HOCl and OCl⁻ depending on pH. Both are vulnerable to UV-driven reactions that remove active chlorine from the “available sanitizer” pool. The loss is not the same as bather demand or algae consumption—it’s a separate, sunlight-driven decay curve that peaks on clear, high-UV days.

CYA binds a fraction of chlorine in forms less prone to instant UV destruction, trading faster kill rates for persistence. That’s why unstabilized indoor pools can hold FC differently than sunny outdoor pools at the same test number—context matters. Read more in CYA stabilizer explained and high CYA “chlorine lock”.

Practical implications

Calculator links

Pool Chlorine Calculator, CYA Calculator, Shock Calculator.

Related guides

Common Questions

Why does chlorine disappear faster on sunny days?

Solar UV photolyzes hypochlorous acid and related species, converting active chlorine into chloride and byproducts—loss rates spike without cyanuric acid buffering.

Does CYA stop sunlight from using chlorine?

CYA slows UV loss by forming reversible complexes; it does not eliminate demand—you still need adequate free chlorine for bather load and algae control.

Indoor pool—same issue?

UV exposure is usually far lower, so FC can behave more predictably; still watch combined chlorine and ventilation for chloramine issues.

WaterBalanceTools provides practical calculators and guides for pool and hot tub water chemistry. These tools are designed to help maintain safe chlorine, pH, and total alkalinity within a healthy water balance.

Published by Water Balance Tools · Operated by Albor Digital LLC