Sorry
I'll see if I can summarise a bit better:
Gases always try to reach equilibrium, so:
- If there is more CO2 in the headspace than dissolved in the beer, gas will dissolve in the beer over time, increasing carbonation
- If there is more CO2 in the beer than in the headspace, gas will evaporate out of the beer, making it go flat
Things that speed up the process:
- agitation: think shaking up a beer before you open it, it makes the CO2 come out really quickly. The same thing happens in reverse in a kegging system with flat beer and high pressure CO2 gas in the headspace.
- the difference in pressure: if you suddenly reduce the gas pressure in the head space, the CO2 bubbles out quickly (this is what happens when you pour a beer). By the same logic, if you turn up the pressure on your gas bottle, the CO2 dissolves into the beer more quickly.
- temperature: cold beer will dissolve more CO2 more quickly than warm beer.
This is why the standard technique to quickly force carbonate a beer is:
1. Chill the beer.
2. Attach your gas, at a high pressure, say 200kpa.
3. Shake it up, for a short time.
4. Turn down the gas to pouring pressure*.
5. Open the release valve to reduce the pressure in the headspace to pouring pressure.
6. Pour a beer. If it's not highly carbonated enough, go to 2.
* assuming you have a check valve, otherwise disconnect the gas in disconnect before you do this step, so that you don't suck foam into your regulator.
I'm going to stop now. Really, once you have a fiddle with your system, you'll just get a feel for how it works, but I hope I've given you a fair idea of the basics. If you need more info, try here:
A Beginner's Guide to Kegging
and here:
Achieving Correct Carbonation