No, not to me :-) The presence of air inside the bottle isn't awfully
relevant. Nor are 'partial pressures' in the headspace. Air (mostly
nitrogen) isn't very soluble compared to CO2 (I think about 50 times
less) and the headspace volume is small compared to the total volume. So
CO2 is by far the dominant partner in the system (by about 98%).
The 1 atmosphere offset consideration is that Henry's Law deals in
absolutes. Hence you must saturate your cider with CO2 to get up to the
1 atm of normal atmospheric pressure that we all live under. Only after
that will there be 'carbonation'. The gauge pressure is the bottle
pressure in excess of the 1 atmosphere required for saturation that
takes place without carbonation being apparent.
My Henry's Law spreadsheet is at
http://www.cider.org.uk/carbonation_table.xls (not very elegant but it
does the job). All cells should be locked except the blue input cell at
F29. If you check it against all the published tables you'll find it
only agrees if the "1 bar offset" is applied. That is another reason for
doing so!!
[BTW don't put too much faith in the higher temperature figures. They
are extrapolations which were only included to answer the original
question we had here about what happens to the pressure at
pasteurisation temperatures]
Andrew
--
Wittenham Hill Cider Pages
www.cider.org.uk
The Apple Farm,
Moorstown, Cahir, Co. Tipperary.
No the spreadsheet does not allow for volume expansion of the liquid nor
for compression of the headspace vacuity. It is simply Henry's Law
relating solubility to pressure above the liquid. The industry standard
'vacuity' in a carbonated drinks bottle is in the region of 3 - 5
percent of the total volume. It may seem a bit counter-intuitive but in
fact variations in the volume of the headspace between 1 and 5% have
relatively little effect on the overall pressure inside the bottle. That
is because most of the CO2 is actually stored in the liquid and more
dissolves back in there as the pressure rises, so the normal gas law
PV=nRT does not apply to the headspace. (And paradoxically, there is
more kinetic energy stored in the headspace of a half-full bottle of
carbonated drink that there is in a full one, simply because there is a
bigger volume of gas under pressure).
It gets a bit mind-boggling at times ;-)
Andrew
--
Wittenham Hill Cider Page
> It gets a bit mind-boggling at times ;-)
Yes it sure does :-)
I'm afraid all this is way over my head, but fascinating all the less! Just
wish I'd listened harder in Maths and Physics classes at school. :-)
Cheers,
Ray.
What a brilliant bit of logic though. I think I get it, but so
counter-intuitive.
Many thanks Andrew.
Con Traas
Realize that the expansion percentage of the liquid is very small in this
case. It's just that with no headspace the situation is hydraulic. Where
pressure and volume are inversely related for a gas at a particular
temperature, the tendency for a fluid to expand with heat won't be denied.
--
Dick Dunn rc...@talisman.com Hygiene, Colorado USA
> So, would it make more sense to say:
> - if there is no air in the bottle, gage pressure in the bottle would
> be pressure computed from Henry's law minus 1 atm
> - if there is air, then we would substract only about 0.8 atm from the
> Henry's law computed pressure.
>
>
Yes I believe you are right Claude. I was in danger of trying to
oversimplify earlier! In fact the adverse effect of air on 'force
carbonation' is well known to drinks technologists and they usually
de-aerate the drinks before carbonation to ensure minimal air content.
This is partly to minimise the long term effect of chemical oxidation in
the drink (the solubility of O2 is about double that of N2), but also
because empirically it is known that dissolved air causes 'fobbing' of
CO2 both during filling and on opening (this was put to good use some
years ago in the canned Guinness 'widget' which was pressurised with
nitrogen in order to create a deliberate head of foam when the pressure
was suddenly released. Not sure if it ever made it out to Qu�bec!).
Hence most semi-manual carbonation / filling rigs include a 'snifting'
(gas releasing) stage to try and purge any remaining air from the bottle
headspace and ensure it is filled only with CO2 before it is sealed. It
is also (picking up on your calculation) an issue when you come to
measure CO2 in a bottle by means of an 'aphrometer'see
http://www.vigoltd.com/in-bottle-co2-pressure-tester.php If any air is
in the headspace it will interfere and give a false reading of the true
pressure due solely to the CO2 (and which is what we are trying to
measure). The 50-fold solubility issue works against us here because a
small amount of dissolved air will make a much larger contribution /
error to the headspace pressure than a similar amount of CO2. So, the
standard procedure with an aphrometer is to shake vigorously, then to
'snift' to release any air, re-seal, shake again and only then to take
an equilibrium pressure reading.
All this has made me realise for the first time that one of the
fundamental differences between force-carbonation and 'conditioned'
carbonation must be the small amount of dissolved and/or headspace air
in the latter. Some of it may be taken out metabolically by the yeast
but probably more remains than in the case of a force carbonation rig
(if operated with de-aeration and snifting). One impact that this could
have is a greater tendency to 'fob' than with force carbonation,
although the presence of solids (yeast / colloids) to act as nuclei
probably makes at least as large a contribution.
It does also mean that any calculation of total internal pressure
achievable from sugar addition probably needs to take into account the
effect of headspace air which you describe, rather than just a straight
Henry's Law calculation based on the in-bottle yield of CO2.
Interesting .......!!
The implication of 'fobbing' or 'gushing' is a rapid and uncontrollable
release of gas and foam. The sort of thing that shoots all up your arm.
Or what crass sportsmen do to celebrate when they shake up bottles of
champagne and spray it everywhere ;-)
> I have noticed that my own bottled cider has a much finer or smaller
> sized bubble/ foam when opened and poured than the supermarket stuff.
> Is this because of forced carbonation vs natural co2 generated ?
>
Almost certainly that is the difference. Natural conditioning tends to
produce a much finer 'mousse' with smaller longer lasting bubbles than
forced carbonation. This is usually ascribed to yeast derived colloids /
proteins / fatty acids etc acting as 'micro nucleation sites' where the
CO2 bubbles are formed and released. This has been studied quite a lot
by the French champagne and the Spanish cider industry, who have
published several learned scientific papers on the topic.
'Fobbing' in force carbonated beers has also been studied and attributed
to a multitude of causes, even down to the presence of mould spores on
the barley AFAIR.