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Degrees Brix (symbol °Bx) is a measurement of the dissolved sugar-to-water mass ratio of a liquid. It is measured with a saccharimeter that measures specific gravity of a liquid or more easily with a refractometer. A 25 °Bx solution is 25% (s/w), with 25 grams of sugar per 100 grams of solution. Or, to put it another way, there are 25 grams of sucrose sugar and 75 grams of water in the 100 grams of solution.

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Brix, Balling, Plato

The Balling scale was developed by German chemist Karl Balling. It refers to the concentration of a dissolved solids (mostly sucrose) , as the weight percentage sucrose at 17.5 °C.

The Brix scale was originally derived when Adolf Ferdinand Wenceslaus Brix recalculated Balling's scale to a reference temperature of 15.5 °C. The Brix scale was subsequently recalculated again, and now uses a reference temperature of 20 °C. Brix can be approximated as 261.3*(1 - 1/g), where g is the specific gravity of the solution at 20 °C.

The Plato scale which measures in Plato degrees is also a refinement of the Balling scale. It uses a reference temperature of 17.5 °C and a slightly different modulus, with the approximation 260*(1 - 1/g), where g is the specific gravity of the solution at 17.5 °C.

The three scales are often used interchangeably since the differences are minor.

  • Brix is primarily used in fruit juice, wine making and the sugar industry.
  • Plato is primarily used in brewing.
  • Balling appears on older saccharimeters, and is still used in the South African wine industry.

Usage

Brix is used in the food industry for measuring the approximate amount of sugars in fruits, vegetables, juices, wine, soft drinks and in the sugar manufacturing industry. Different countries use the scales in different industries; in the UK brewing is measured with specific gravity X 1000, European brewers use Plato degrees, and US industries use a mix of specific gravity, Brix, degrees Baumé and Plato degrees.

For fruit juices, one degree Brix is about 1-2% sugar by weight. This usually correlates well with perceived sweetness.

Since Brix is related to the concentration of dissolved solids (mostly sucrose) in a fluid it is therefore related to the specific gravity of the liquid. Because the specific gravity of sucrose solutions is well known, it can also be measured by refractometers.

Modern Brix meters are digital refractometers that calculate the Brix value based on refractive index. These meters are typically portable, splashproof and very simple to use, so that they can be operated by anybody directly on location. More and more often Brix is measured to determine ideal harvesting times of fruit and vegetables so that products arrive at the consumers in a perfect state or are ideal for subsequent processing steps such as vinification.

Scientific usage

When a refractometer is used, it is correct to report the result as "refractometric dried substance" (RDS). One might speak of a liquid as being 20 °Bx RDS. This is a measure of percent by weight of TOTAL dried solids and, although not technically the same as Brix degrees determined through a specific gravity method, renders an accurate measurement of sucrose content since the majority of dried solids are in fact sucrose. When an infrared Brix sensor is used, it measures the vibrational frequency of the sugar molecules, giving a Brix degrees measurement. This will not be the same measurement as Brix degrees using a density measurement because it will specifically measure dissolved sugar concentration instead of all dissolved solids. The index of refraction and density of mixtures such as ethanol and water are calculated using the Gladstone-Dale relation.

References

Further reading

See also

External links

Specific Gravity Resources:





BRiX is a new operating system that attempts to redefine how operating systems should be designed. Like conventional operating systems, it will provide features such as SMP, preemptive multi-threading, virtual memory, a secure multi-user environment and an easy to use graphical interface.

BRiX is not a conventional operating system and some of its new features include:
  • Small, fast and responsive -- The devlopers believe there is no reason why operating systems should be bloated, slow and unresponsive.
  • Data-centric -- All data is stored in a flat filesystem and accessed using search queries on the attached metadata. The traditional hierarchical filesystem requires the user to remember where files are stored and what they were named. An easy-to-use graphical interface plugs the data into special interface objects that provide multiple means of viewing and modifying the data. The traditional approach launches applications to display data and requires the user to manually launch additional applications if the default is not what the user wants.
  • Persistence -- All changes to data are automatically saved and can be undone even after the current session has been closed.
  • Reconfigurable User Interface -- The interface objects, that present the user with multiple views of data, can also be modified by the user. This allows the user to add or remove features to or from interfaces and change the layout to be more efficient and easier to use.
  • Safe-language -- BRiX uses a special language that guarantees fine-grained program safety instead of relying on hardware which only provides coarse-grained protection. Some people associate the term 'safe-language' with Java and think BRiX will use an interpreted language, this is not true. The language used is very much compiled and not even possible to interpret due to its design.
  • Security -- Other operating systems use special hardware features and lots of runtime checks to secure the system but programmers aren't perfect and sometimes make mistakes. These mistakes can lead to the system being exploiting and data being lost or stolen. BRiX makes use of its safe-language to provide fine-grained protection and frees the programmer from writing runtime checks.
  • Repository -- BRiX uses a repository to give users a trusted location for which all code can be easily and automatically downloaded from.


  • See also Osdev

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