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==TA versus pH==Many sour beer producers use pH to help determine how "sour" their beer is in relation to a set goal, previous batches, or commercial examples. ==pH== However, often times TA is a more useful measurement of how acidic a beer will be perceived on the palate.
===pH===
In chemistry, pH is the negative log of the activity of the hydrogen ion in an aqueous solution. Solutions with a pH less than 7 are said to be acidic and solutions with a pH greater than 7 are basic or alkaline. Pure water has a pH of 7.
The pH scale is traceable to a set of standard solutions whose pH is established by international agreement<ref name="bates">Bates, Roger G. Determination of pH: theory and practice. Wiley, 1973.</ref>.[1] Primary pH standard values are determined using a concentration cell with transference, by measuring the potential difference between a hydrogen electrode and a standard electrode such as the silver chloride electrode. Measurement of pH for aqueous solutions can be done with a glass electrode and a pH meter, or using indicators.
pH measurements are important in medicine, biology, chemistry, agriculture, forestry, food science, environmental science, oceanography, civil engineering, chemical engineering, nutrition, water treatment & water purification, and many other applications. <refname="bates">Bates, Roger G. Determination of pH: theory and practice. Wiley, 1973.</ref>.
pH is best tested in sour beers using a [[PH Meter]] and is most useful for biological parameters. Cells live or die based on pH, not TA. This means pH should be used when testing sanitizer, sour worting, starter cultures, etc.
===Why TA?===When attempting to use pH for sensory parameters (how sour something tastes), the measurement falls short. Humans perceive acidity from tasting acids, not H+ ions. In a strong acid, the amount of acid is always proportional to the amount of H+ ions. However, lactic acid, the primary acid in sour beer, is a weak acid. For various reasons a weak acid does not completely ionize/dissociate.
==Testing for Titratable Acidity in Sour Beer==
===Equipment Requirements:===
# pH Meter with Automatic Temperature Correction
# Buffer/Testing Solutions for pH Meter
===Procedure===
# Calibrate the pH meter.# Pipette 50mL of decarbonated beer into the beaker.# Place the pH probe and the ATC thermometer into the beaker, submerge tip in of the probe into the beer.# Fill the buret with 0.1N of NaOH.# Open stopcock the Stopcock and add the NaOH to the beer until pH meter reaches a reading of pH 7.0.# Upon reaching 7.0pH, go slowly add more NaOH until pH meter reads exactly pH 8.2, keeping track of how much NaOH is added.# Record the total amount of NaOH used to reach pH 8.2.# Use the following formula to find the ''Titratable Acidity'': =='''Titratable Acidity = (mL 0.1N NaOH * 0.9) / (mL beer * S.G.)=='''# The number you get is TA in grams/L.
==Uses in Sensory & Further Reading:==
* It may be best to compare the ratio of ''Titratable Acidity'' to ''Final Gravity'' as sweetness counter-acts acidity in sensory experiments <ref>Kara Taylor, White Labs - CBC 2015 Presentation "Sour Beer is More than pH"</ref>.
* More information on this procedure is available from the American Society of Brewing Chemists, who publish a similar set of procedures under the name "Total Acidity with Potentiometer".
* Jim Crook of Firestone Walker has created a presentation about blending sour beers using TA. Contact him for a copy.
[[Category:Techniques]]