i use RO water to sparge, can i use Lactic Acid to adjust the pH ?
And how much Lactic Acid do i have to use to get the pH of the Sparge water down to pH 5.4 ?
Thanks
Cheers
Stefan
Yes, Lactic can be used for this, without any issues. You probably need to ask yourself if you actually need to acidify your RO water though. RO water won't need much acid to get it down to pH 5.4, but it depends on the volume of sparge water you are using and concentrated percentage of Lactic acid you have. First question you need to answer is; What is the pH of your current end runnings? This may answer whether you actually need to add acid to your RO sparge water at all. If the end runnings aren't getting above 5.8, then don't bother with sparge acidification. If the end runnings never get above 6.0 and your sparge temp is 76-78C then the same applies. If you find astringency in your beers that has no other explanation, despite the end running pH and temps being in the right ranges, then give sparge acidificaiton to 5.4 a crack.*
I use
Brewers Friend Advanced Water calculator, which has a tab for Sparge water Acidification to calculate this. I find that with my mains water the acid volume given by this calculator is always 1.3 times lower than is actually needed (this took me a few times to get this figure right, but it is consistent). That is with my particular mains water though, so I wouldn't say this would be across the board. The only way to know if the figure produced is correct is to test the actual pH.
So running 15L of RO sparge water through this calculator with 88% Lactic it throws out the figure of 0.01 ml acid needed to bring it to pH 5.4. As pointed out above, you should test the actual pH to see if it comes out at the pH you want. Mine needed 1.3 x the calculated figure, but my water is not RO.
The Bru'n water spreadsheet also does calculations for sparge acidification. Just running that through with the same figures as above, shows no acid is needed. Bru'n water only goes to 1 decimal point though.
EDIT - * I will point out that you will also need to consider your end runnings gravity readings to ensure that you aren't over sparging, which will also increase your chances of extracting some astringent constituents. Rough guide is 1.010 end runnings, though some say higher, some lower. I've had it down to 1.004 without any issues, though I would have stopped earlier if I'd known it was that low.