ABB Conductivity Analyzer: High precision Industrial Water Quality Online Monitoring and Intelligent Analysis Solution
Real time and accurate conductivity monitoring is the key to ensuring production process safety, improving product quality, and controlling costs in industrial fields such as power, chemical, pharmaceutical, and microelectronics that require extremely high water purity. As a global leader in process automation, ABB's conductivity analyzer integrates advanced sensing technology, intelligent algorithms, and robust industrial design, providing a reliable and powerful tool for continuous monitoring and control of solution conductivity. This article is based on ABB's official technical manual, providing a comprehensive analysis of the design principles, core functions, configuration methods, and practical applications of the analyzer.
Instrument Overview and Design Concept
The ABB conductivity analyzer is designed for continuous online monitoring and control, offering two versions for wall/pipeline installation and disk installation, and supporting single or dual sensor input modes. Each sensor channel is equipped with an independent temperature input (supporting Pt100 or Pt1000 platinum resistors) for achieving high-precision temperature compensation.
The core operation of the instrument is completed through five tactile membrane buttons on the front panel, combined with a dual layer display interface: the upper layer consists of two rows of 4 and a half digit digital tubes, which are used to display measurement values, alarm setpoints, and units; The lower layer is a 16 character dot matrix display screen that provides programming and status information. All programming functions are protected by a five digit secure password to prevent unauthorized tampering, ensuring the stability and security of process control.
Core functions and advanced applications
1. Automatic Temperature Compensation (ATC): From Principle to Practice
The conductivity of a solution is significantly affected by temperature. This analyzer provides multiple advanced temperature compensation modes, far beyond simple linear compensation:
No compensation: Suitable for situations where raw measurement values are required, such as monitoring of water for injection (WFI) and purified water in accordance with the United States Pharmacopeia (USP).
Linear compensation: suitable for monitoring non-standard solutions or solutions of unknown purity with known temperature coefficient (α).
Pre set curve compensation: For specific impurity types in pure water systems, multiple pre set compensation curves are provided, including UPW (pure water), HCl (trace acid), NaOH (trace alkali), NaCl (trace salt), and NH3 (trace ammonia). For example, in the water treated with ammonia in the boiler, selecting the NH3 compensation curve can more accurately reflect the true changes in impurity concentration.
Its advanced compensation algorithm, especially for ultrapure water (UPW), not only considers the temperature effect of impurity ions (usually α ≈ 0.02/° C), but also separates and compensates for the main effects of H ⁺ and OH ⁻ ions generated by hydrolysis ions when approaching the state of ultrapure water. The compensated readings are uniformly converted to the international standard reference temperature of 25 ° C, ensuring comparability and accuracy of the data under different temperature conditions.
2. Dual sensor input and differential conductivity application
The dual input model greatly expands the application range of the instrument, and by comparing the readings of two sensors, various calculations can be performed:
Ratio (A/B) and difference (A-B): used to monitor the performance of ion exchange columns, desalination rate of reverse osmosis systems, etc.
Transmittance (% Passage) and Rejection (% Rejection): Directly calculate the percentage of conductivity passing through or being rejected in the processing unit, which intuitively reflects the processing efficiency.
Inferred pH: This is an advanced feature of the analyzer. Given the presence of only a single regulator (such as ammonia or sodium hydroxide) in a known sample, the pH value of the sample can be calculated by measuring the difference between the specific conductivity before and after passing through the cation exchange column, known as the "inferred pH". This function is widely used in the monitoring of boiler water chemical treatment (such as ammonia and hydrazine addition). The instrument can be programmed to set a conductivity alarm limit for cations (0.060-1.000 μ S/cm). If this limit is exceeded or the conductivity before cations exceeds 10 μ S/cm, an alarm will be triggered, indicating the presence of other impurities and verifying the validity of the inferred pH value.
3. Flexible analog output and alarm configuration
The analyzer provides isolated analog current output (0/4-20mA), which can be flexibly allocated to any measured variable (conductivity or temperature). The output function supports linear, bilinear, and logarithmic outputs of 2 or 3 orders of magnitude, making it very suitable for situations with a wide range of conductivity changes (such as from ultrapure water to concentrated saltwater).