• Please visit and share your knowledge at our sister communities:
  • If you have not, please join our official Homebrewing Facebook Group!

    Homebrewing Facebook Group

Element different colour after boil

Homebrew Talk

Help Support Homebrew Talk:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

Bosvark

Member
Joined
Jun 18, 2014
Messages
6
Reaction score
0
Hi all
So I did a dry run on my biab to test boil off and to clean my chiller. I added a bit of vinigar for the chiller. Afterwards the element is pinkish. Looks like copper, tried cleaning it with bkf but nothing?
Bought it as a stainless element on amazon.

Any advice?
Thanks
 
Did some research turns out the element is magnesium oxide and nickel plating. Guess the vinigar removed the plating? Is this bad?
 
Did some research turns out the element is magnesium oxide and nickel plating. Guess the vinigar removed the plating? Is this bad?
The magnesium oxide is the electrical insulation which is inside of the metal tube of the element. None of it is exposed on the surface. If you have a plated element, then it likely has a copper layer plated under the outer layer (which could be nickel.) If you removed the nickel, then the pink may be the copper layer. If you paid for stainless, you got cheated. I'd contact Amazon for a refund.

There's also the possibility that the acetic acid (vinegar) dissolved some of the copper from the chiller, which redeposited on the surface of the element, making it look pink. Not sure if that reaction is favorable for the half cell potentials of the metals involved.

Brew on :mug:
 
The magnesium oxide is the electrical insulation which is inside of the metal tube of the element. None of it is exposed on the surface. If you have a plated element, then it likely has a copper layer plated under the outer layer (which could be nickel.) If you removed the nickel, then the pink may be the copper layer. If you paid for stainless, you got cheated. I'd contact Amazon for a refund.



There's also the possibility that the acetic acid (vinegar) dissolved some of the copper from the chiller, which redeposited on the surface of the element, making it look pink. Not sure if that reaction is favorable for the half cell potentials of the metals involved.



Brew on :mug:


Cool thanks for the explanation!
 
The magnesium oxide is the electrical insulation which is inside of the metal tube of the element. None of it is exposed on the surface. If you have a plated element, then it likely has a copper layer plated under the outer layer (which could be nickel.) If you removed the nickel, then the pink may be the copper layer. If you paid for stainless, you got cheated. I'd contact Amazon for a refund.



There's also the possibility that the acetic acid (vinegar) dissolved some of the copper from the chiller, which redeposited on the surface of the element, making it look pink. Not sure if that reaction is favorable for the half cell potentials of the metals involved.



Brew on :mug:


Cool thanks for the explanation!
 
Thanks.
I'm not too concerned, I'll see how the next batch turns out. [emoji106]
 
Back
Top