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Turbidity

Why Does Turbidity Matter to Water Quality?

Turbidity is a simple indicator of water quality that can be measured with turbidity meters and sensors across a variety of applications. In almost all water supplies, high levels of suspended matter are unacceptable for aesthetic reasons and can interfere with chemical and biological tests.

The ability to accurately and reliably measure turbidity is an important component of understanding water quality for the following reasons:

  • Quality and aesthetics
  • Health reasons
  • Regulatory compliance

Whether you are in the field or the laboratory, Hach® offers a variety of turbidity analyzers, meters, and sensors to ensure easy and accurate results.

 

Featured Alkalinity Products

TU5300sc/TU5400sc Online Laser Turbidimeters

The TU5 Series employs a patented optical design that sees more of your sample than any other turbidimeter, delivering the best low level precision and sensitivity while minimizing variability between measurements. Remove uncertainty of which measurement to trust between your lab and process instruments, thanks to identical 360° x 90° Detection Technology.

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Solitax sc Sensors

Accurate, color-independent suspended solids and turbidity measurements in accordance with DIN EN ISO. Due to a large measuring range for both turbidity and solids, the Solitax sc family offers a broad application spectrum and is ideal for drinking water, wastewater, surface water, and sludge treatment applications. A self-cleaning device prevents biological growth and interference of gas bubbles. Uses the infrared duo scattered light method.

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Surface Scatter 7 sc High Range Turbidimeter

The Surface Scatter 7 sc High Range Turbidimeter offers superior performance across a measurement range of 0 to 9999 NTU. The Hach Surface Scatter 7 sc Turbidimeter (SS7) is the original non-contact turbidimeter. This design minimizes sensitivity loss due to high turbidity samples; in fluids with high loads of suspended solids the design makes sample cell cleaning and replacement unnecessary.

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S1000 Portable Parallel Analyser (PPA)

TSS sc Sensors

Hach's TSS sc are digital special probes for determining turbidity and suspended solids in aqueous, and also aggressive, media, in accordance with DIN EN ISO. Made of highly polished stainless steel or titanium with a scratch resistant sapphire lens the TSS sc are ideal for high temperatures and pressures, for hygienically environments, or for corrosive media.

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TU5 Series Laboratory Turbidimeters

The TU5200 is designed to deliver a revolutionary 360° x 90° Detection Technology, engineered to see more of your sample than any other turbidimeter. This unique technology is used in both the TU5 online and TU5 benchtop turbidimeters, allowing you for the first time to remove the uncertainty of which measurement to trust.

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S1000 Portable Parallel Analyser (PPA)

TL2350 Tungsten Lamp Turbidimeter, EPA, 0 - 10000 NTU

The new TL23 Series laboratory turbidimeters blend trusted technology and improved features to simplify testing in the most demanding wastewater and industrial applications.

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TL2300 Tungsten Lamp Turbidimeter, EPA, 0 - 4000 NTU

Hach’s new TL23 lab turbidimeter brings a new face to the trusted legacy 2100N and 2100AN turbidimeters. It utilizes the same optic bloc while delivering an improved user experience with its intuitive interface, which ties perfectly to the rest of Hach’s laboratory instruments.

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S1000 Portable Parallel Analyser (PPA)

2100Q Portable Turbidimeter

The 2100Q portable turbidimeter provides convenient data logging. Up to 500 measurements are automatically stored in the instrument for easy access and backup. Stored information includes: date and time, operator ID, reading mode, sample ID, sample number, units, calibration time, calibration status, error messages, and the result.

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Which Applications and Processes Require Turbidity Monitoring?

Several industries require regular turbidity measurements in order to keep their day-to-day operations in check. While good water quality is essential, different processes reap additional benefits from measuring turbidity.


Drinking Water Treatment

While regulatory compliance is important for municipal drinking water and water treatment plants, measuring turbidity can also help keep the cost of operations down. Taking regular turbidity measurements can optimize filter performance by establishing efficient filter backwash cycles. And in the case of filter breakthrough, turbidity readings can indicate a breach of particles before it becomes a costly problem requiring an appropriate regulatory response.

Ultimately, turbidity measurements are an important part of quality control in water treatment plants. They help operators achieve their most important goal: Making water safe for consumers to drink.

Drinking Water Treatment

Beverage Industry

Good water quality is vital in the beverage industry too, where the taste and texture of a drink are of utmost importance. For alcoholic beverages like wine and beer, flavor consistency and shelf life are at the heart of quality control. For bottled water and soft drinks, it’s easy for consumers to see when something is off—especially if turbidity is an issue.

Turbidity can vary dramatically depending on where water is sourced from in the beverage industry. Having turbidimeters operational ensures that manufacturers can monitor the quality of their water to see if it needs extra filtering or treatment. With consistent measuring, turbidity readings keep quality in check to ensure that water always meets high standards for beverage making.

Drinking Water Purification

Wastewater Treatment

A turbidimeter can reflect on the amount of suspended solids in water at different parts of the treatment process, whether it’s for compliance reporting or for process control in real time.

Turbidity measurements can help ensure that effluent meets quality standards in municipal wastewater.

Boiler Water Applications

 

How is Turbidity Measured?

There are three main ways for measuring turbidity and each has benefits for different industries.

Taking an indirect measurement with a Secchi disk or tube can be helpful for gauging turbidity relative to water clarity in a body of surface water such as a lake or river.

Turbidity sensors can be submerged in water to take more accurate readings using light-scattering techniques. Some turbidity meters, or turbidimeters, can take readings on a sample without touching the liquid directly.

Turbidimeters are the most versatile devices for measuring turbidity, since they can be used in a wide variety of settings. Turbidimeters usually employ a beam of light, called incident light, which scatters off of suspended particles in the sample being measured.

Nephelometry

The method of measuring scattered light at 90 degrees to the incident light beam is called nephelometry and the turbidimeter used for this type of measurement is a nephelometer. Nephelometers detect the amount of scattered light and compare it to a calibrated measurement standard that can be set by the user. If the water is more turbid, the light will scatter more. If it’s less turbid, the light will scatter less. Only nephelopmetric methods to measure turbidity are accepted for regulatory compliance and reporting in the US.

Different nephelometers and turbidimeters exist for different purposes, though their core principle of measurement remains the same—measure the portion of light scattered by the particles.

1) Process Turbidimeters for Continuous Monitoring

In drinking water and some wastewater treatment plants, it’s essential to monitor turbidity continuously to keep each step of the filtration process in check and avoid costly mishaps.

Process turbidimeters are simple, low-maintenance and accurate—perfect for an environment where they’re needed to provide readings at a moment’s notice.

2) Laboratory Benchtop Turbidimeters

Benchtop turbidimeters are perfect for measuring grab samples and conducting an array of tests on water from multiple sources.

They’re designed to be sensitive and precise for ultra-accurate measurements in controlled lab conditions.

3) Portable Turbidimeters for Remote Locations

Setting up a lab turbidimeter at a construction site or near a river after a storm would be an unnecessary hassle.

That's where portable turbidimeters are most useful. These handheld devices are durable, simple to use and able to conduct rapid tests in the field.

Turbidity Standards

Turbidimeters need to be calibrated according to standards set by manufacturers and regulatory organizations in order to ensure an accurate turbidity measurement. This is often done by using a liquid synthetic material called Formazin.

Formazin is the only recognized true primary standard for turbidimeter calibration. Newer standards, such as the StablCal ® Stabilized Formazin Turbidity Standards, build off of Formazin but have better stability.

StablCal standards, especially packaged in sealed vials, are ideal for calibrating turbidimeters in the field, because their higher stability and portability ensure a lab-grade quality reading even outside the lab.

 

Frequently Asked Questions

How do you use a turbidimeter?

All turbidimeters have different operating requirements, so it is important to check the manufacturer’s instructions before use.

Nonetheless, most turbidimeters follow the same general procedure for benchtop or portable units:

  1. Uncap a clean vial and fill it with the unfiltered water sample you wish to measure. Be sure to stir the sample by gently inverting the container before pouring it into the measurement cell to resuspend particles that may have settled, while avoiding the creation of air bubbles.
  2. Tighten the cap on the sample (measurement) cell and hold it by the cap.
  3. Wipe away any excess liquid, dirt, or fingerprint marks from the cell using a soft, lint-free cloth.
  4. Place the turbidimeter on a flat, stable surface.
  5. Turn on the device.
  6. Set the automatic range.
  7. Select signal averaging.
  8. Insert the sample cell into the measurement compartment of the turbidimeter.
  9. Close the measurement compartment lid.
  10. Press the Read button to obtain the turbidity measurement, typically displayed in Nephelometric Turbidity Units (NTU).

What is the normal range for turbidity in water?

Before disinfection, the turbidity of drinking water should be below 1 NTU, according to the World Health Organization’s standards.

If it’s above 1-2 NTU, the effectiveness of chlorination significantly decreases. In areas where fewer resources are available, the turbidity should be below 5 NTU.

What is the difference between turbidimeters and nephelometers?

Turbidimeters and nephelometers both measure the cloudiness of water. A nephelometer is a type of turbidimeter that measures the amount of light reflected off of particles at a 90-degree angle.

They are often used to test samples with suspected low turbidity, such as filtered water samples from a drinking water treatment plant. This type of turbidimeter is accepted for regulatory reporting according to EPA and ISO standards.

What is ultra-high turbidity measurement?

Ultra-high turbidity is when a sample is so turbid that traditional nephelometric light-scatter methods are not useful. At turbidities in excess of 2,000 NTU, there’s a decrease in nephelometric signal, and traditional turbidimeters cannot take an accurate reading of light scattered by the suspended solids.

Color can also influence turbidity measurement and the use of strictly nephelometric readings is not always an accurate way to gauge ultra-high turbidity in samples of surface water, wastewater, food products, cell cultures or oil in water, for example.

Fortunately, there are other techniques that can be used to measure ultra-high turbidity: transmitted, forward-scatter and back-scatter methods. Also known as ratio turbidimetry, these methods are used for many applications where ultra-high turbidity needs to be measured, such as monitoring the fat content in milk, for example.

What is the correlation between turbidity and total suspended solids (TSS)?

The foremost significant difference between these two parameters is that turbidity is method-derived, while TSS is an absolute parameter.

That means that TSS can be measured gravimetrically by evaporating all liquids, then weighing the solid residue and expressing concentration in milligrams per liter (mg/L). The difference is also reflected in dilution - the TSS of diluted samples is linear, while turbidity may not change linearly with the dilution of samples or standards.

A turbidimeter can estimate the TSS in a liquid. However, this only works if there is an established correlation between turbidity and the TSS of the sample, which may not be sustainable and can depend on various conditions.

What is the history of turbidity?

The first formal measure of water turbidity (circa 1900) was called the Jackson Candle Method (Figure 1). It was essentially a vertical glass tube mounted over a candle. The scale on the tube was calibrated using dilutions of a standard reference solution comprising 1,000 parts per million (ppm) of diatomaceous earth (silica) in distilled water.

The calibrated units of measure on the tube were called Jackson Turbidity Units (JTU). Sample water was poured into the tube until the distinct image of the candle flame was no longer visible to the human eye when viewed from straight above. The depth of water in the tube at that point corresponded to a distinct JTU reading on the scale of the tube.

Compared to today’s instruments and methods, that original method was a relatively crude measure of turbidity that could result in inconsistencies due to differences in the viewer’s eyesight and the candle used.

In 1926, Kingsbury, Clark, Williams and Post developed a new standard reference solution (formazin polymer) that was easier to formulate. It provided greater consistency than Jackson’s diatomaceous earth reference standard, which could vary according to the material source.


Formazin also does a good job of replicating the particulates and turbidity typically experienced in drinking water applications. One advantage of formazin is that, even though not all of the polymer chains are of an identical size, it produces a very regular response every time it is synthesized.

The formazin standard was a major step toward standardizing turbidity testing. It is still in use today, while other turbidimetry components — such as light sources and light detectors — have been refined to eliminate the variables of candlelight and human eyesight.


Portable Turbidimeters for Remote Location

Figure 1.The original Jackson Candle Turbidimeter was based on the amount of light transmitted from a candle through a column of water.