Editor's Choice


Conductivity sensing as a cornerstone of South Africa’s water smart industry

June 2026 Editor's Choice Sensors & Transducers

South Africa’s engineers operate at the intersection of resource constraint and industrial ambition. Few parameters illustrate this balancing act as clearly as water quality. Whether in municipal treatment works, food and beverage plants or mining operations, the ability to measure water quality accurately and continuously has become non-negotiable.

Among the suite of analytical measurements available to engineers, conductivity stands out for its simplicity, robustness and relevance. As an indicator of ionic content, conductivity provides immediate insight into purity, contamination, separation of media and cleaning efficiency. In a water stressed country, this insight translates directly into reduced waste, improved uptime and better compliance.

Why conductivity matters in a South African context

Conductivity measurement reflects how well a liquid conducts electrical current, which in water applications, is directly related to dissolved salts and contaminants. For local industries, this single parameter supports multiple critical objectives:

• Verifying drinking, process and ultrapure water quality

• Monitoring filtration, reverse osmosis and demineralisation efficiency

• Distinguishing between product, rinse water and cleaning agents in clean in place (CIP) processes

• Preventing downstream corrosion, fouling and product losses

In food processing hubs from the Western Cape to KwaZulu-Natal, conductivity is used to optimise CIP cycles, reducing chemical consumption and water use without compromising hygiene. In mining and power generation, it acts as an early warning signal for scaling and mineralisation in cooling circuits.

Compact sensors for real world plants

Traditional conductivity installations often relied on separate probes, transmitters and extensive cabling − adding cost, complexity and failure points. Modern compact sensors have changed this equation decisively.

ifm’s LDL family of conductivity sensors integrates the measuring element and evaluation electronics into a single housing, communicating digitally via IO-Link or analogue outputs. For South African plants where cabinet space, installation time and maintenance skills are limited, this compact architecture reduces both capital and lifecycle costs.

Standardised M12 connectors, IP68/IP69K protection and hygienic approvals ensure suitability for demanding industrial and washdown environments common in local process plants.

Conductive vs inductive measurement: choosing the right tool

Modern conductivity sensing is not one size fits all. Engineers must select between conductive and inductive measurement principles depending on the application.

Conductive conductivity sensors

Conductive sensors measure current directly through the medium and offer extremely high resolution at low conductivity levels. Devices, such as the LDL101, can measure down to 0,04 µS/cm, making them ideal for ultrapure water systems in pharmaceuticals, electronics manufacturing and hydrogen electrolysis. In South Africa, these applications are growing as industries pursue local beneficiation, advanced manufacturing and green energy technologies.


Inductive conductivity sensors

Inductive sensors, by contrast, use electromagnetic coupling to determine conductivity without direct electrode contact. This makes them exceptionally resilient to fouling, coating and aggressive media – key advantages in mining, water treatment and CIP processes. Inductive sensors are widely used to distinguish between cleaning fluids, rinse water and product, enabling faster phase detection and reduced wastage in food and beverage plants.

Polypropylene and corrosion resistance

One of the most significant recent developments is the introduction of fully polypropylene housed inductive conductivity sensors, such as the LDL400. Based on proven inductive technology, the all-plastic design addresses a persistent South African challenge, corrosion.

In coastal plants, desalination facilities, chemical dosing stations and filter installations, stainless steel sensors can suffer premature degradation due to salty air, acidic media or aggressive cleaning chemicals. The LDL400’s polypropylene construction provides continuous corrosion resistance while maintaining a wide measurement range from 100 to 2 000 000 µS/cm.

This makes the sensor suitable for:

• Municipal water and wastewater treatment

• Desalination and filtration systems

• Fish farming and aquaculture

• Marine and ship based water treatment

• Vertical and controlled environment farming

Its compact measuring channel minimises blockage risk, an important consideration where water quality and solids loading can vary significantly.

Pure water, ultrapure challenges

As South African industry moves into higher value manufacturing and energy applications, pure and ultrapure water systems are becoming more common. In these environments, even trace contamination can disrupt processes or damage equipment.

Conductivity sensors designed for ultra-low ranges enable continuous monitoring of ion exchange, filtration and membrane performance. A rising conductivity value acts as an early indicator that cartridges require replacement or that breakthrough has occurred, long before quality is visibly compromised. This preventative capability supports condition-based maintenance, reducing unplanned downtime and extending asset life, which are critical in remote or energy-intensive installations.

IO-Link and data transparency

Modern conductivity measurement does not stop at the sensor. Digital communication via IO-Link allows engineers to extract high-resolution process data, temperature compensated values, diagnostics and configuration information directly from the field device.

In the South African context, this enables:

• Reduced wiring and faster commissioning

• Standardised sensor inventories across plants

• Remote diagnostics and troubleshooting

• Integration into IIoT and asset management platforms

By making water quality data visible at both operational and management levels, sensors support informed decisions about cleaning cycles, water reuse and process optimisation.

Use cases rooted in reality

Practical use cases reinforce the value of conductivity sensing:

• Water filtration and treatment: Monitoring ion concentration to ensure safe and compliant output

• CIP systems: Detecting cleaning agent concentration and rinsing endpoints to reduce water and chemical use

• Cooling water circuits: Identifying mineralisation trends before scaling damages heat exchangers

• Hydrogen production: Ensuring ultrapure feedwater quality for electrolysis processes

Each of these applications addresses a broader national imperative − using water smarter, not just more sparingly.

Engineering for scarcity, designing for resilience

What ultimately distinguishes South African engineering is context. Sensors must operate reliably in environments defined by resource scarcity, high operating costs and limited tolerance for failure.

Conductivity sensors may be small components, but their impact is systemic. By enabling precise measurement, early intervention and data driven control, they help engineers deliver safer water, cleaner processes and more efficient plants. In a country where every litre counts, measuring what matters is not a luxury, it is sound engineering.

If you want to see this product in action, visit us at Electra Mining Africa from 7 to 11 September 2026 at stand A06 in Hall 7.


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