Many people start with the wrong question:
👉 “Should I choose a pH meter or a COD analyzer?”
But in reality, analytical measurement is not about choosing a device.
It is about answering a much simpler question:
👉 What exactly do you want to know about your process?
What Is Analytical Measurement (Simple Explanation)
In industrial measurement, most instruments measure “visible” things:
- Flow → how fast liquid moves
- Level → how much liquid is inside
- Pressure → how strong the force is
But analytical instruments are different.
👉 They measure what you cannot see — the composition of a substance
For example:
- pH → is the liquid acidic or alkaline
- Conductivity → how many dissolved substances are inside
- COD → how polluted the water is
📌 Simple analogy:
- Flow meter = how fast water moves
- Level sensor = how high the water is
- Analytical instrument = whether the water is usable
Step 1: Do You Need Monitoring or Control?
Before choosing any instrument, ask:
👉 “Am I just observing, or controlling a process?”
✔ Monitoring (Observation)
Used in:
- laboratories
- environmental testing
Focus:
👉 accuracy and precision
✔ Control (Process Operation)
Used in:
- dosing systems (pH control)
- wastewater discharge control
Focus:
👉 stability and reliability
📌 Common mistake:
👉 Using laboratory-grade thinking in industrial environments
Step 2: What Type of Problem Are You Solving?
You can simplify analytical measurement into three categories:
① “Is it acidic or not?” → pH / ORP
Used in:
- water treatment
- chemical reactions
👉 Focus: chemical balance
② “Is it clean or dirty?” → COD / Turbidity
Used in:
- wastewater treatment
- discharge monitoring
👉 Focus: pollution level
③ “Is it pure or not?” → Conductivity
Used in:
- food & beverage
- pharmaceutical water systems
👉 Focus: dissolved impurities
📌 Key idea:
👉 Your question determines your instrument
Step 3: Can the Instrument Survive Your Environment?
This is where many beginners fail.
Analytical instruments are often sensitive by nature and can struggle in harsh industrial conditions
So the real question is not:
❌ “Which one is most accurate?”
✅ “Which one can work reliably here?”
Ask yourself:
- Is the liquid corrosive?
- Are there particles or sludge?
- Will scaling or fouling occur?
- Is the temperature high?
📌 Example:
Same conductivity measurement:
- Clean water → standard sensor
- Wastewater → anti-fouling or inductive sensor
📌 Analogy:
👉 Running shoes vs safety boots
Step 4: Where Should You Measure?
For analytical instruments:
👉 measurement location is often more important than the instrument itself
Common installation methods:
- Inline (pipe)
- Immersion (tank)
- Sampling system
📌 Example:
COD measurement is usually not done directly in the pipeline.
Instead:
👉 Sample → condition → analyze
📌 Analogy:
👉 Like a blood test — not done while running
Step 5: Keep It Simple — The 5 Questions That Matter
You don’t need to memorize complex theory.
Just answer these 5 questions:
👉 1. What do I want to know?
👉 2. Is it for monitoring or control?
👉 3. Is it acidity, cleanliness, or purity?
👉 4. Can the instrument survive my conditions?
👉 5. Where should I measure?
👉 If you can answer these,
👉 you can choose the right analytical instrument
Conclusion
Analytical instrument selection is not about brands or models.
👉 It is about understanding your process.
Because in the end:
👉 Analytical measurement is not just measuring liquid
👉 It is deciding what happens next in your system
If you are unsure:
- whether to use pH, COD, or conductivity
- how to install the instrument
- or which solution fits your process
💡 You can simply send us your application details (even basic ones).
We will help you:
👉 define what needs to be measured
👉 choose the right measurement method
👉 recommend a reliable solution
👉 Get a solution within 24 hours
👉 Free consultation available
📩 WhatsApp: +86 132 7933 7527
📧 Email: info@antletstech.com