Banner
Banner

Sign Up for Brew Your Own’s Free E-Newsletter

Email
Get a free trial issue of WineMaker.
Banner
Home Story Index Techniques How can you prevent a vacuum from forming in an airlock during fermentation?
How can you prevent a vacuum from forming in an airlock during fermentation?
Issue April 2000

Dear Mr. Wizard:

I brewed a batch of lager (a three-gallon batch in a five-gallon carboy) and instead of the normal CO2 venting out of the air lock, a vacuum formed. I used a wort chiller and pitched the yeast at 72° F. At 18 hours the cap was sucked down onto the vent tube with liquid (vodka) suspended in the vent tube (wort temperature 64° F sitting in my basement). I moved the carboy to a refrigerator sitting in a cold garage and the wort temperature dropped to 54° F over the next 18 hours. The same vacuum was present at 36 hours. Finally after 48 hours a slow fermentation was going with the cap raising, but it was three-plus days before a strong fermentation was present. Could the rapid temperature change or poor yeast start have caused the vacuum? What happened and what can I do to prevent this in the future?

Larry Silbernagel
via e-mail

Mr. Wizard replies: What happened to your fermenter was due to the relation between gas temperature, volume and pressure. A sealed container will exhibit a decrease in gas pressure if the container is cooled and conversely its pressure will increase when heated. Fermentation airlocks allow gas to escape and a cool carboy that is heated will not build pressure. However, a warm carboy that is cooled will exhibit a drop in pressure. This vacuum will suck liquid from the airlock into the carboy. Eventually the airlock will be empty and the vacuum will be relieved. If your fermentation took off more quickly and/or your wort was cooled to the same temperature as your basement this would not have occurred. This phenomenon is easy to avoid early in the process, but if you cool your airlocked carboy after the primary fermentation is complete, the vacuum will return. I prevent any liquid from an airlock being sucked into my beer by removing the airlock and covering the carboy with aluminum foil. After cooling, I replace the airlock.

Vacuum is not a major problem for homebrewers, but it is perhaps the most devastating force present in large tanks. Big tanks are designed to withstand some sort of pressure, but are rarely designed to cope with vacuum. Big tanks can be sucked in like a tin can if they are not treated properly, for example rinsing a large tank with cool water after a hot wash. If you keep in mind that a vacuum is created when you go from hot to cold you will easily prevent this problem.

Mr. Wizard, BYO's resident expert, is a leading authority in homebrewing whose identity, like the identity of all superheroes, must be kept confidential. To see more of Mr. Wizard, check out the latest issue of Brew Your Own at better homebrew shops and newsstand locations.


Subscribe

Free Trial Issue. Subscribe Today!

Send me a FREE TRIAL issue of Brew Your Own and start my risk-free subscription. If I like it, I'll pay just $28.00 for 7 more issues (8 in all) and save 30% off the annual newsstand rate. If I'm not completely satisfied with the trial issue, I'll just write "cancel" on the invoice and return it. I'll owe nothing and the trial issue is mine to keep.

Publisher's Guarantee: If you aren't completely satisfied with Brew Your Own Magazine at any time, for any reason, we'll issue a complete refund of your subscription price.

8 issues - $28.00 Add $5.00/year for Canadian postage Add $17.00/year for foreign postage

Risk-Free. Just fill out the form and click submit.

First Name
Last Name
Address
Address 2
City
State or Province
ZIP
Country
Email

This Free Trial Issue offer is only valid in the US and Canada. To subscribe to Brew Your Own outside the US and Canada, please click here.

To order a gift subscription to Brew Your Own, please click here.