Water activity meter reading over 1

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers around the use of a new water activity meter, specifically the Aqualab 4, and an observed anomaly in its readings. When measuring tomato paste with a water activity (aw) of approximately 0.99, the meter displays values around 1.02 to 1.03 when the sample temperature is about 0.5° below the set point of 25°. Participants explore whether this could be a quirk of the meter or a physical phenomenon, with suggestions that it may relate to hysteresis caused by the sampling frequency and mirror fogginess. The conversation clarifies that water activity measures the saturation of water vapor, not the refractive index of water. It is noted that the device's software may not filter out these preliminary values, which could be intended for user convenience, as the device typically waits for readings to stabilize at a set temperature.
fedaykin
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Good evening. I recently was taught how to use our new water activity meter, and I noticed something strange.
This meter uses changes in the reflectance of a mirror.

Whenever we'd bring the sample up to temperature, the measurement would reach a low point, then at about 0.5° below our set temperature of 25°, the measurement would hit about 1.02 or 1.03. I'm curious if this is a quirk of the meter itself, or if there is a physical phenomenon underlying this. The underlying sample was a tomato paste with aw measured at about 0.99.
 
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When you say 'water activity' are you referring to the refractive index of water?
 
Nope, water activity is a measure of the saturation of the water vapor, used in food sciences: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_activity

Not that I knew it, had to google.
 
Which device are you using to get those measurements?
How accurate is the measurement in general?
Could be a simple accuracy issue, but it is odd that the device software doesn't filter it.
 
Borek said:
Nope, water activity is a measure of the saturation of the water vapor, used in food sciences: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_activity

Not that I knew it, had to google.

Well, that's pretty much the definition of activity in thermodynamics.

Sounds like a dew point measurement.
 
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Thank you for all the posts here.
I've decided the readings above one are probably from hysteresis, probably due to a difference in frequency of sampling temperature and mirror fogginess.
The makers of the device (it's an Aqualab 4) could assume that people would only use the result at a stable temperature.
Since the device has a target temperature, it simply waits for the measurement to stabilize to a certain accuracy within range.

Perhaps they display a preliminary value for convenience of the end user.
 
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