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Titratable Acidity

2 bytes added, 12:40, 13 December 2018
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At or around a pH of 8.2, we have reached our equivalence point for a titration of pure NaOH and pure lactic acid. We need to convert the moles of NaOH we added into moles of lactic acid, and then divide the equivalent grams of lactic acid by the original volume of beer. That gets us g/L, and our titratable acidity. For a numerical example, assume '''15mL''' beer with a gravity of '''1.015''', '''5mL''' 0.1M NaOH:
 
[[File:TA example.gif|center|Titratable Acidity Example]]
 
In summary, the measurement of titratable acidity is a technique to quantify the total acid level of a beer. A major assumption was made: all the acid in the liquid was lactic acid. Two beers could have the same TA measurement, but have differing levels of palatable acidity, due to the acid makeup of the beer.

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