Refractometers measure the refractive index of sugar in water. CaCl2 is not sugar.
Hmmm I thought all refractometers were the same but I guess brewers ones are different. I know refractometers measure other solutions than just sugar water.
I did just check with my hydrometer and it measured 1.092
This hygroscopic (sucks up water) behavior of calcium chloride is kind of a pain in the rear. Over time, it will draw water out of the atmosphere and attach that water to the solids. We brewers end up not knowing how much calcium and chloride we are actually adding to our brewing water.
On the large scale commercial side, some industries use food-grade calcium chloride solutions for their use. Once the calcium chloride is saturated with water, it won't change any further. As AJ mentions above, you can easily use a hydrometer to measure the specific gravity of a calcium chloride solution and quickly figure out what its strength is from charts such as this:
http://http://www.prog-univers.com/IMG/pdf/CalciumChloridHandbook.pdf
(see the first 2 columns in Table 7)
Since calcium chloride is easily dissolved in water, we would be well served by taking our solid calcium chloride and dissolving it in distilled water to preserve its strength at a constant level. The next version of Bru'n Water will include an alternate calculation for liquid calcium chloride use. Just insert the % strength of the solution and it will properly calculate the calcium and chloride additions with each mL of added solution.
Thanks for good feedback:That approach is similar to that used for using a calcium hydroxide solution. Keep excess solids in the solution and the supernatant will be at its saturation limit. The only problem is that the dissolved content varies with temperature.
Yes that is a good idea especially if you make the solution in short time before brewing.I'd only add one thing to the saturated approach: take an SG reading to check that the solution is really saturated.
That is exactly what I got too.Just to make sure I'm doing this right.
I took a 250ml flask, added 20g of CaCl2, and added distilled water to the 200ml mark.
Measured my gravity and it was at 1.070. Enter that into the formula and I get 86.07 g/L.
So if I need 6g of CaCl2 to brew I'd add 6g/86g/L = .069L (69ml), right?
That is exactly what I got too.
View attachment 578431
Not sure of your math? Is it that I, @LSUGrad0 and others have got different results than you.That would be 70 mL or 74,45 grams
Not sure of your math? Is it that I, @LSUGrad0 and others have got different results than you.
@portguy thank you for sharing. It’s true we learn something new every day.You are right...it's 74,76 grams.
70mL*0,998203*1,070 = 74,7654047
I find it easier to weigh the solution instead of measuring its volume. That's all.
Q?
Has the W/W issue been corrected in Bru'n Water v5.3 ?
as I am getting a different result with
W/W = 100*( -684.57 + 175.12*C11 + 509.45*C11^2)/(C11*998.203)
where C11 is the SG
with SG = 1.060 Above yields 6.9441
where BnW yields 6.7