The important thing to understand is that heat increases the kinetic energy of molecules therefore chemical reactions happen faster at higher temperatures. This means that the same staling reactions that take minutes in the mash will be slowed down to hours or days after chilling in the fermenter.
OK, so here's how I'd sum this up. Let me know if I'm summarizing correctly, and then I've got two questions.
Dissolved Oxygen doesn't remain as DO in the presence of wort & beer, it goes through chemical reactions to create various oxides. In the end, as brewers, we're worried about minimizing the oxides. And DO is an indicator of the potential of our mixture to create oxides. However, since these oxidizing reactions are happening in real time, we're measuring DO as it's being consumed. At hot temperatures this happens quickly versus at room temperatures.
And has been pointed out, when looking at finished beer, the staling level we're concerned about is in the range of 20 PPB, whereas the MW600 has accuracy in the +/- 300 PPB range, meaning it's essentially pointless to try to measure this, and even comparative measurements will be complicated to avoid introducing air in the sampling/measuring process itself.
Sound right?
Here's my questions:
1. Do the same DO-consuming reactions happen in water? Is measuring strike water DO something that works?
2. I think the only one of my tests where I measured DO on hot wort was when I took some samples from the boil kettle to measure pre and post boil. (The other ones were with cool wort or with water.) And in that case, I had to cool it down (put it in a shallow dish to cool in the air before putting in a glass to submerge the measurement probe in once it had cooled to room temperature. Any measure on how fast the DO gets consumed at mash or boil temperatures? In other words, if you took a sample of hot wort right after you performed some process you were interested in, and then cooled quickly, would you be able to cool it fast enough to get a read on the DO that was present in the hot state?