originally posted by MLipton:
Sorry, guys: I was caught up in festivization and not paying attention to this thread. Ian, you’re way overthinking things but have the right idea. I think for the fridge that the increased solubility of oxygen is a red herring. Because we’re talking about chemical kinetics (the rate of oxidation) we need only concern ourselves with the slowest step, the so-called rate limiting step. In the absence of any real knowledge I will assert that the rate of dissolution of oxygen into wine is highly unlikely to be rate limiting, so its concentration in solution won’t change the overall rate. Instead, the rate limiting event is likely to be oxygen ingress through/past the stopper. Put another way, Le Chateliers Principle states that, as the oxygen in solution is consumed through reactions, it will promote the solubiluzation of gaseous oxygen from the headspace to restore equilibrium.
Another useful nugget from kinetics: as a general rule, a drop in temperature of 10 degrees C will result in a reduction in rate of a chemical reaction by a factor of two, so chilling a wine from 25 C to 5 C would be expected to slow oxidation by a factor of 4.
Chemboy Lipton