Alcohol Level - By-volume/by-weight Conversion Formula
Có thể bạn quan tâm
-
- Home
- Questions
- Tags
- Users
- Unanswered
- Teams
Ask questions, find answers and collaborate at work with Stack Overflow for Teams.
Try Teams for free Explore Teams - Teams
-
Ask questions, find answers and collaborate at work with Stack Overflow for Teams. Explore Teams
Teams
Q&A for work
Connect and share knowledge within a single location that is structured and easy to search.
Learn more about Teams by-volume/by-weight conversion formula Ask Question Asked 10 years ago Modified 5 years, 4 months ago Viewed 27k times 10Okay, because I have nothing better to do on a Friday night (i.e., my carboys are all currently fermenting), I've decided to fiddle a little bit with math.
I know that 0% alcohol by weight (ABW) is also 0% alcohol by volume (ABV), and I know that 100% ABW is 100% ABV. I also know that, in between those two extremes, the relationship is not linear (e.g., 3.2% ABW is approximately 4.0% ABV). However, any web-site calculator that I see pretty much performs the calculation as linear.
I've been fiddling with my TI-89 from high school, and I think that I have it figured out. Assuming ethyl alcohol has a density of .789 kg/l and water has a density of 1 kg/l and assuming that water and alcohol are the only substances in an alcoholic beverage (which I know isn't true), the formula is:
ABV = ABW ÷ (.211 · ABW + .789)The problem is that I can't confirm my formula. I'm searching Google and can't find much on the topic. Well… I can find plenty of calculators, but they all seem to be using a linear formula.
So… is this formula correct?
EDIT: So, I've done a little more tweaking on this (after I already got the accepted answer). I already made the assumption that the density of water is 1 kg/l. The density that I used for ethyl alcohol was for 20°C. At that same temperature, water has a density of approximately .99823 kg/l and not 1 kg/l. Using this, I arrived at a different formula that's probably more accurate (at 20°C, that is):
ABV = (99823 · ABW) ÷ (20923 · ABW + 78945)EDIT: Please see AlkonMikko's comment.
Share Improve this question Follow edited Aug 20, 2015 at 14:47 Daniel Wolfe asked Nov 1, 2014 at 0:54 Daniel WolfeDaniel Wolfe 2031 gold badge2 silver badges8 bronze badges 2- 2 This hurts my head, I need a beer. Preferably one with an ABV value already known. – Alaska Man Commented Feb 28, 2017 at 7:20
- The formula ABW = 0.1893*ABV*ABV + 0.7918*ABV + 0.0002 is good only for proof from 120% to 80% or so. – user8684 Commented Jul 3, 2019 at 0:52
4 Answers
Sorted by: Reset to default Highest score (default) Date modified (newest first) Date created (oldest first) 9I'm a Chemical Engineer and it frustrates me that everywhere on the internet appears to be using this linear approximation. Yeah it's probably okay for hobby brewers, but for anyone actually interested in solving the problem for example use in software design or higher ABV products, this approximation is really not good enough.
This is actually a ridiculously complicated subject and it all boils down to the fact that at a molecular level, water and ethanol interact with one another with what are known as hydrogen bonds. Now you can just use an empirical lookup table or regress a tonne of data, but if you're interested in the root of this problem you should do some research into what are known as equations of state. In particular UNIQUAC for ethanol-water mixtures. It get's even worse when you realise that these equations of state describe gaseous behaviour remarkably well, but require additional thought to be applied to liquids.
People dedicate their entire lives into perfecting a generalised equation of state to describe the interactions between all chemical components. ANYWAY I digress...
I've done some number crunching myself using UNIQUAC and have come up with the following simple formula. Like yours above, it's only applicable to ethanol-water mixtures, and I've only validated this equation up to an ABV of 50% so be weary of going higher. This equation has an R-Squared value of 1.
ABW = 0.1893*ABV*ABV + 0.7918*ABV + 0.0002
Try it yourself :)
Share Improve this answer Follow edited Feb 8, 2017 at 9:47 James Henstridge 2,01814 silver badges22 bronze badges answered Jan 30, 2017 at 16:45 Joel AndrewsJoel Andrews 1061 silver badge1 bronze badge Add a comment | 3It is easier to reason about how to derive the alcohol-by-weight value from the alcohol-by-volume rather than the reverse.
If abv is the alcohol-by-volume value expressed as a number between 0 and 1, then for a unit volume of the liquid, the weight of the alcohol will be 0.789 * abv. Similarly, the weight of the non-alcohol component will be 1 - abv (assuming it has a density of 1). So the total weight of the liquid will be:
0.789 * abv + (1 - abv) = 1 - 0.211 * abvUsing the weight of alcohol and the total weight, we can easily determine the alcohol-by-weight (also expressed as a number between 0 and 1):
abw = 0.789 * abv / (1 - 0.211 * abv)So this is clearly not linear (it is hyperbolic), and maintains identity for the 0% and 100% cases as expected. We can invert the equation in a few steps:
0.789 * abv = abw * (1 - 0.211 * abv) 0.789 * abv = abw - 0.211 * abv * abw 0.789 * abv + 0.211 * abv * abw = abw (0.789 + 0.211 * abw) * abv = abw abv = abw / (0.789 + 0.211 * abw)So that confirms the formula you derived. Wolfram Alpha seems to agree.
Share Improve this answer Follow answered Nov 3, 2014 at 16:12 James HenstridgeJames Henstridge 2,01814 silver badges22 bronze badges 1- 3 This is wrong, vol-% is defined by (volume of solute/volume of solution) and when you mix alcohol and water the volume of the mix is smaller than the total volume of the starting liquids. For example when you mix 50 ml of water with 50 ml of ethanol, you only get about 96,5 ml of solution. The formula is more complicated, unfortunately I do not have the answer. – user3899 Commented Mar 18, 2015 at 15:49
According to Alcohol by volume (Wikipedia):
ABV * 0.78924 = ABW * SpecificGravity(at 20°C in g/ml)
Thus ABV = ABW * SpecificGravity / 0.78924
This formula is only correct for a mixture of ethanol and pure water. You can't plug in the s.g. of your beer and have it work.
I have found tables that relate ABW to specific gravity for ethanol/water solutions, one can be found here
I dumped the table into a spreadsheet, and used the formula to create a conversion table for ABV and ABW.
Please note that the formula is not completely accurate against the table, 100% ABW calculates to 100.01% ABV. 0.01% difference is not really significant for our purposes. Not sure if the table or formula is incorrect.
Share Improve this answer Follow edited Jan 31, 2017 at 13:17 Ken Graham♦ 10.8k10 gold badges40 silver badges68 bronze badges answered Apr 21, 2015 at 23:04 Evil GeniusEvil Genius 212 bronze badges 1- There is actually absolutely no reason this formula would not work for beer or any other liquid, if the SG is known. "SG / 0.78924" is actually just density-of-measured-solution/density-of-ethanol, which by definition will produce the right weight->volume factor for ethanol contained in any (arbitrary) solution, no matter what it is made of. The only drawback to this is that it requires that you know the SG of your solution to calculate the conversion (which varies nonlinearly for ethanol in water). – Foogod Commented Oct 31, 2021 at 0:47
The table prduced by Evil Genius should produce the correct answer. The error reported on 0.01% for 100% ABW is because the siource table given density of 100% alcohol as 0.78934 and he divided by 0.78924. Either the table or his divisor must be wrong.
Share Improve this answer Follow answered Dec 6, 2017 at 0:57 user7402user7402 Add a comment |Your Answer
Thanks for contributing an answer to Beer, Wine & Spirits Stack Exchange!
- Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!
But avoid …
- Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.
- Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.
To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.
Draft saved Draft discardedSign up or log in
Sign up using Google Sign up using Email and Password SubmitPost as a guest
Name EmailRequired, but never shown
Post Your Answer DiscardBy clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.
Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged
or ask your own question.- Featured on Meta
- We’re (finally!) going to the cloud!
- More network sites to see advertising test
Related
4 Burned volume to alcohol percentageHot Network Questions
- Power series of the reciprocal of f defined as a power series
- How can I tell if commercial packaging is suitable for Sous Vide cooking?
- C# basic calculator
- Why does C#'s Thread.MemoryBarrier() use "lock or" instead of mfence?
- How to handle a campaign where the players are trapped inside a monster controlled by another player?
- Did Superdana manufacture a 66 AC outlet power strip/surge protector?
- When SG-1 arrives in 1969, why is it initially an "empty" gate room?
- Perfect cross in a \fbox square
- Suggestion for catching a flight with short layover in Amsterdam
- Can I protect my EV car charger's cable with aluminum tape and a stainless steel hose helix?
- Quantum gravity and perturbative parameters
- Is using a virtualised android instance or emulator within "operating system vendor supported or warranted configurations"?
- Installing a 240V outlet on Aluminum Wiring for an Electric Oven in Old House
- What is the basis for the view of Oneness in Theravadha?
- "Your move, bud."
- Is my evaluation for this multiple linear regression correct?
- Chain skipping when pedaling hard
- How to stop Apple Sports live activities watch notifications?
- Boy who can see EM waves but loses the ability because of a thunderstorm
- Low Resolution in Org Latex Preview
- Does launch on warning assume incoming ICBMs carry nuclear warheads?
- Do switches try to keep track of Ethernet group membership?
- What does one contemplate to become a sotāpanna?
- How to create a thesis flowchart using Mathematica?
To subscribe to this RSS feed, copy and paste this URL into your RSS reader.
Từ khóa » Volumetric Weight Ethanol
-
Ethanol Volume To Weight Conversion - Aqua-Calc
-
Ethanol Weight To Volume Conversion - Aqua-Calc
-
1 Liter Of Ethanol In Kg - Volume To 'Weight' Converter - CoolConversion
-
Ethanol Weight Percentage -> Volume Percentage - Science Forums
-
Ethanol - Density And Specific Weight Vs. Temperature And Pressure
-
Volume Correction Factors—ethanol (ethyl Alcohol Anhydrous)
-
Determination Of Volume Of Distribution For Ethanol In Male And ...
-
%, V/v, W/v, W/w - Dlsweb..au
-
About Bottle Fill Level, Weight Vs Volume Measurements, And Head ...
-
[PDF] OIV-MA-AS312-01A : R2016
-
Density And Concentration Calculator For Mixtures Of Ethanol And ...
-
Alcohol Intake: Measure For Measure - PMC - NCBI
-
[PDF] Calculation Of Ethanol Production From Fermentation
-
Converting Alcohol Content By Volume To Alcohol Content By Weight