On 9/7/2017 5:11 PM, Danny D. wrote:
Anyone know if saturation by carbon dioxide has a time constant?
http://i.imgur.com/MSm72Tp.jpg
Swirling seems to work with these 2L bottles, where I mix 4 degrees C
(or about) water under 30 psi CO2 pressure (or about) for about 10
minutes per bottle (give or take) because I assume "diffusion" is slow;
but is diffusion slow, or is it (nearly) instantaneous?
http://i.imgur.com/gUJnLk3.jpg
Anyone have experience with how long it should take for carbon dioxide
to diffuse into the surface layer of water, and then to diffuse deeper
if I don't swirl?
If I just plug it in for a few minutes, the water isn't bubbly enough.
If I leave it for an hour, two things that are bad happen:
1. I lose CO2 because my connections are imperfect, but worse, 2. The
water warms up (meaning it will hold less C02).
If you don't know whether the diffusion "should" be instantaneous or if
there is some kind of pragmatic coefficient, that's OK. It works.
I just don't know what I'm doing and why.
Do you?
Either way, its nothing that a chemistry book can't fix. (They don't actually bite)