Cleaning and Sanitation

I haven't been brewing that long (since October 2003) so I am no expert in this area but I have picked up a few tips from many places. If you are a newbie then you might have noticed quite a bit of contrary information out there. Or heard people rave over products only to find they are not available in Australia.

There are lots of sites out there with good information on this topic, one that comes to mind is How To Brew chapter 2. Still, I find lots of the information from homebrewing sites is presented without support and it is sometimes difficult to separate myth from fact. This wiki page tries to combine input from the homebrewing community with references from other relevant sources. Don't forget to relax and have a homebrew.

From what I have gleaned from talking to experienced people, the greatest risk of infection is before the yeast takes hold in the wort. Apparently, once the yeast gets going, the environment is a whole lot less friendly for unwanted tenants.

/!\ I make no claims that the information contained here is accurate and/or correct and is provided for educational purposes.

/!\ Always read the label. Some of the materials mentioned here can do you serious damage.

Also note that this page includes contributions from various people - I don't necessarily have first hand experience with their recommendations.

Definitions

Cleaning
Removal of oils, dirt and crap like that. If you don't do this before you sanitise then bugs can find a place to hide from the sanitiser.
Sanitising
Reducing unwanted micro-organisms to unnoticable levels.

Links

Cleaning

/!\ Most of these cleaning products, even if relatively "safe" will defat the skin on your hands.


Sanitising

To be honest I haven't had an infection yet so everything I have tried works :D

For what it is worth, I use an alkaline (high pH) cleaner and acidic (low pH) sanitizer. I figure this produces a pretty unfriendly environment for micro-orgamisms but I haven't done any research on whether this has any basis.

Keep this all in context, if you have to rinse after you sanitise and your water supply is dodgy then think again. Remember that beer and fermentation were originally approaches to making drinking water safe (so I have been told). One reason I use the phosphoric acid solution is that I don't need to rinse it and it has little if any odour.

Suppliers

Cleaning Pics

Ok so its no secret I like sodium percarbonate for brewhouse cleaning applications. And its not because I just heard a rumour about it from some LHBS or on a web forum somewhere, I have used it in many household applications and it is:

My expresso group head and filter after dunking in sodium percarbonate solution for around 1 hour.

Now with the group head experiment above, I missed the opportunity to do a before and after comparison, so when I cleaned my coffee rocket, I remembered to take a pic before I cleaned it.

Note that the scum is not really baked on, it is that oily coffee film, which certainly doesn't dissolve in the washup water.

A teaspoon in the rocket.

Mmmm shiny. Since the coffee process is not totally unlike the beer brewing process (organic materials, boiling, metal surfaces) you have a fair idea on what it can do for fermenters, kegs etc.

And if you think "you're not a real brewer unless you have a MarchPump", I reckon "you're not a real brewer unless you buy sodium percarbonate in 25 kg lots (or more)".

Summary Info

Sodium Hydroxide

Sodium Percarbonate
(Sodium Carbonate Peroxyhydrate)

Phosphoric Acid

Bleach

Iodine

Sodium Metabisulphite

Hydrogen Peroxide

cleaner

Oil, Fat, Wax, Calcium

Organic stains, deoderant, will not remove rust stains or mineral deposits from hard water

beerstone, protein, resins, yeast @ 2-3%

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sanitizer

bactericide

bacteriostatic
Somewhat bactericidal
sporicidal

disinfectant
bactericide

bactericide

bactericide

bacteriostatic

bacteriostatic

recommended concentrations

depends on soilage

depends on soilage

2g/L of 85% (pH 2)

Not sure but increasing concentration higher than recommended reduces effectiveness

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.

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contact time

depends on soilage

30 seconds

30 seconds

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must rinse2

yes

no

no

yes

no

maybe

no

compatibility

corrodes aluminium

oxidant

can be corrosive to ferrous metals and alloys, particularly at high concentrations

Can corrode stainless steel, particularly at solution-air interface if left in contact too long

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.

.

storage

powder aggressively aborbs moisture from air

Absorbs water from air, coated product fine

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keep powder dry

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useful life (of solution)

indefinite

decomposes over several hours, in open container, greater than a week in sealed, refrigerated container

indefinite

Ok if container sealed

.

>days if in sealed container

.

safety

Highly caustic

Pretty safe at typical dilutions

Strong concentrations highly corrosive.
Used in foods like Cola up to about 2%.

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powder is irritant

Safe at typical concentations

environmental

.

benign byproducts

Weak solutions safe

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.

Decomposes into water and oxygen

commercial products which use it

Neo Pink?

One-Step
PBW, Cellarman?, OxiClean, Napisan

StarSan
AC100
AC305

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Iodophor

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Brewshield

other uses

cleaning drains

washing nappies
chemistrystore.com Household Uses

yeast nutrient, food acidifier, dairy industry sanitiser

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.

wine making

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notes

add surfactant to improve wetting

add surfactant to improve wetting

add surfactant to improve wetting

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references

chemistrystore.com

How To Brew
chemistrystore.com Household Uses
Manufacturers description
PUBMED abstract re H202
EPA (USA) Fact Sheet
Lab Sanitation with Napisan
wikipedia article

US Gov
astaris
NATIONAL POLLUTANT INVENTORY
OMRI

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Iodophor Demystified

chemicalland21.com

Hydrogen_peroxide
Bactericial properties of hydrogen peroxide

paul sorenson

  • 1 Even listed as a yeast nutrient, sanitise your FV and feed your yeast all in one!

  • 2 Applies to typical concentrations. Be sensible, drain as much product as practical and read the label.

CleaningAndSanitation (last edited 2006-05-13 22:01:41 by Alex Thompson)