Principles of cleaning and CIP
− CIP in the brewery (and food and beverage applications)
Alyce Hartvigsen
29/04/2020 | © Alfa Laval
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What we’ll talk about today
− Agenda
• Principles of cleaning and CIP
• CIP in the brewery (and food and beverage applications)
• Technologies for tank cleaning
• Optimization of CIP process
• Automated CIP solutions from Alfa Laval Brewery Systems
29/04/2020
| © Alfa Laval
2 |
www.alfalaval.com
Purpose of cleaning and CIP
− Why do we clean?
• Maintenance of product purity, quality and safety
• Prevention of product contamination (e.g.,
spoilage)
• Prevention of cross-contamination (e.g., ingress
of one product into another)
• Maximization of equipment uptime and production
capacity (fastest possible resumption of
production after completed batch)
• Maintenance of control of the production process
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Principles of cleaning
TACT – Sinners Circle
Time
Temperature
Chemicals
Action
• Sinners Circle represents the
scope of a given cleaning task
• The combined elements of the circle
(temperature, action, chemicals,
time) accomplish the task
• Larger share of one or more
elements allow smaller shares of the
others (e.g., higher temperature
allows less time, or more action
allows less time, lower temperature,
less chemicals)
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Mechanical cleaning (action)
− Requirements for mechanical cleaning in the brewery
• For pipes: minimum fluid velocity >1.5 m/sec
to generate sufficient turbulence to achieve
the desired cleaning effect
• For tanks: cleaning machines generating
geometric reach of all interior surfaces (coverage)
and sufficient impact force on the surfaces
• For special equipment (e.g., separators and plate
heat exchangers): clearly defined cleaning
procedures and specifications to ensure optimum
cleaning effect
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Mechanical cleaning
− Minimum flow rates in pipes
Pipe size
Minimum flow rate
Velocity
DN 25
DN 40
DN 50
DN 65
DN 80
DN 100
30 hl/h
80 hl/h
120 hl/h
200 hl/h
300 hl/h
400 hl/h
1.7 m/s
1.8 m/s
1.7 m/s
1.7 m/s
1.6 m/s
1.4 m/s
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© Alfa Laval
Slide 6
Chemicals used in CIP
− Main types of cleaning chemicals and their purpose
Cleaning media
Function
Chemical
compounds
Water
H2O
Caustic (~2%) at
85oC or 35oC
NaOH, KOH
Acid (~0.5–1%)
Disinfectant
HCl, H3PO4,
CH3CO3H
ClO2, O3, H2O2
Water
H2O
Pre-rinses, intermediate rinses and final rinses remove solid
residues and flush away chemical residues.
Dissolves and removes organic residues like yeast and hops.
Requires a CO2-free atmosphere to prevent carbonate
formation.
Dissolves and removes inorganic residues like beer stone.
Can be combined with disinfectant in a single step.
Kills bacteria, spores and hardy microorganisms that survive
caustic wash. Can be combined with acid in a single step.
Pre-rinses, intermediate rinses and final rinses remove solid
residues and flush away chemical residues.
29/04/2020 | © Alfa Laval
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Automated Cleaning-in-Place (CIP)
− What is it?
• Enables cleaning of tanks, piping and other process
equipment without dismantling or manual cleaning
processes
• Typically consists of tank cleaning machines installed
inside the tanks
• Involves cleaning stages using water and chemicals that
circulate through the CIP system to the equipment for
thorough cleaning and disinfection
• Proceeds through the entire sequence of cleaning steps
without requiring human intervention
29/04/2020 | © Alfa Laval
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