mr_wibble
Beer Odd
Greetings earth brewers and brewsters,
I was doing a bit of reading on under and over oxygenating wort. Obviously both are possible, but under oxygenating is the bigger problem. Fine. That's the baseline theory - you want the correct amount if at all possible.
But given it's really difficult to dissolve CO2 in room temperature beer at low pressure, I wondered if it was even possible to over oxygenate wort at all.
Wyeast says[1] generally, yeast want > 10ppm dissolved oxgyen. And using pure O2 for 60 seconds gives ~12ppm.
However assuming I'm reading it correctly, this graph:
Shows the solubility of O2 in (pure) water just under 10mg/litre (= 10 ppm) at 20oC [2]
Am I reading this incorrectly?
To me this says it's theoretically impossible to dissolve much more than 10ppm into pure water (at 1 bar / 20oC). Pure water being the best case.
Therefore, it is impossible to over oxygenate without further cooling, or higher pressure - right?
Obviously processes differ, but my water temperature is usually a bit under 20oC, and that's the best I can chill to. Sometimes I'll put it in the fridge before pitching, but usually it gets O2 + yeast at 20, then straight into the fridge (typically set to 18). Some over-estery Belgian-style beers led me to believe I was under-O2-ing, perhaps this is part of the reason.
[1] https://www.wyeastlab.com/oxygenation/ .
[2] http://www.engineeringtoolbox.com/oxygen-solubility-water-d_841.html .
I was doing a bit of reading on under and over oxygenating wort. Obviously both are possible, but under oxygenating is the bigger problem. Fine. That's the baseline theory - you want the correct amount if at all possible.
But given it's really difficult to dissolve CO2 in room temperature beer at low pressure, I wondered if it was even possible to over oxygenate wort at all.
Wyeast says[1] generally, yeast want > 10ppm dissolved oxgyen. And using pure O2 for 60 seconds gives ~12ppm.
However assuming I'm reading it correctly, this graph:
Shows the solubility of O2 in (pure) water just under 10mg/litre (= 10 ppm) at 20oC [2]
Am I reading this incorrectly?
To me this says it's theoretically impossible to dissolve much more than 10ppm into pure water (at 1 bar / 20oC). Pure water being the best case.
Therefore, it is impossible to over oxygenate without further cooling, or higher pressure - right?
Obviously processes differ, but my water temperature is usually a bit under 20oC, and that's the best I can chill to. Sometimes I'll put it in the fridge before pitching, but usually it gets O2 + yeast at 20, then straight into the fridge (typically set to 18). Some over-estery Belgian-style beers led me to believe I was under-O2-ing, perhaps this is part of the reason.
[1] https://www.wyeastlab.com/oxygenation/ .
[2] http://www.engineeringtoolbox.com/oxygen-solubility-water-d_841.html .