Pool industry textbooks still reference breakpoint chlorination as the standard for superchlorination and chloramine removal. SLAM (Shock, Level, and Maintain) emerged from the residential pool community and is now the dominant protocol among sophisticated pool service professionals. Both deal with the same core problem — high combined chlorine and biological contamination — but they approach it differently and have different strengths. Understanding both makes you a more complete technician.
Breakpoint chlorination is rooted in the chemistry of chloramine destruction. When chlorine (as HOCl) reacts with nitrogen compounds (from ammonia in bather waste), it forms chloramines — the combined chlorine species that cause odor, eye irritation, and reduced sanitizing power.
The chlorination curve shows the relationship between FC added and combined chlorine in the water. As you add FC to a pool with combined chlorine:
The traditional breakpoint formula was developed for conditions without cyanuric acid. At significant CYA levels (30 ppm and above), the breakpoint relationship becomes more complex:
SLAM was developed to address exactly this limitation. Instead of using combined chlorine as the reference point, SLAM uses CYA as the primary variable:
| Aspect | Breakpoint Chlorination | SLAM Protocol |
|---|---|---|
| FC target basis | 10 × combined chlorine | 40% of CYA level |
| Primary problem addressed | Chloramine removal (high CC) | Algae + bacteria + high CC |
| Accounts for CYA? | Not in traditional formula | Yes — CYA is the primary variable |
| Completion criteria | CC drops below 0.3–0.5 ppm | Water clear + CC below 0.5 + OCLT passes |
| Designed for | Chloramine management | Full sanitation recovery |
| Duration | Single treatment with testing | Sustained until all 3 criteria pass |
The key innovation in SLAM that breakpoint chlorination lacks is the Overnight Chlorine Loss Test (OCLT). Traditional breakpoint treatment gives you a target FC level and calls it done when CC drops to the threshold. It has no mechanism for verifying that biological demand has been truly eliminated.
SLAM's OCLT requires that the pool maintain its FC level in the dark (no UV consumption) with no more than 1 ppm loss over 8 hours. If FC drops more than 1 ppm overnight, active biological demand remains — even if the water looks clear and CC reads zero. The OCLT catches incomplete treatment that visual inspection and chemistry tests miss.
In day-to-day pool service, the distinction matters most in two scenarios:
Scenario 1: You arrive at an account with CC = 0.8 ppm, FC = 2.0 ppm, CYA = 40 ppm, and the water is clear with no algae. This is a pure chloramine problem. You can address it with either breakpoint calculation (add 8 ppm FC = shock to 10 ppm total) or SLAM (raise to 16 ppm). Both should eliminate CC — SLAM is a slightly larger, more conservative dose.
Scenario 2: You arrive at an account with CC = 0.8 ppm, FC = 0.5 ppm, CYA = 40 ppm, and there is early green algae on the walls. This requires SLAM. The breakpoint dose alone (adding 8 ppm FC) may kill surface algae and reduce CC, but will not clear an algae bloom and won't have a verified endpoint. Run SLAM until the pool passes the OCLT.
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Open PoolLens Free →Breakpoint chlorination is the process of adding enough chlorine to a pool to oxidize all combined chlorine (chloramines) into harmless nitrogen gas and other byproducts. The traditional formula is 10 times the combined chlorine reading (CC × 10) to reach breakpoint. Above this level, free chlorine rises normally without creating additional chloramines.
Breakpoint chlorination addresses specifically the chloramine problem (high combined chlorine). SLAM is a broader protocol for treating any pool with active algae, bacteria, or persistent chlorine demand. SLAM determines the required FC target based on CYA (not CC), and requires maintaining that level until the pool passes three specific criteria including an overnight loss test.
Use breakpoint chlorination when the pool has high combined chlorine from bather load with no visible algae, especially in low-CYA pools. Use SLAM when visible algae is present, when the pool has persistent chlorine demand, or when CYA is at residential levels where the traditional 10x formula underestimates needed FC.
The 10x rule is an approximation for low-CYA conditions. At higher CYA levels, more chlorine is needed to reach breakpoint because CYA buffers chlorine activity. The SLAM protocol effectively solves this by targeting FC based on CYA rather than CC, which in practice exceeds the traditional breakpoint threshold by design.