3 Nov 2025
Reliable and effective filtration is essential for clarity and taste, but also crucial for stability and ultimately the shelf life of beer. Final filtration of the finished product is usually carried out using layer or candle filters, or cross-flow filter systems. To monitor their correct function, many large industrial breweries use special turbidity meters that offer higher measurement accuracy using a two-angle method with 90° and 25°/11°, but they represent a significant cost factor.

A practical test has now shown that for small to medium-sized breweries, the ITM-4DW four-beam turbidity sensor with 90° and 180° measuring angles offers an equivalent but significantly more cost-effective solution.

Advantages in the Application
» Cost-effective solution for operational monitoring of beer filtration systems
» Automated in-line process control simplifies and improves product quality control
» Haze increase and filter breakage are reliably detected and signaled for immediate switchover to recirculation mode
» Haze value for alarm can be easily set by the user
» Can be used for layer, candle, and cross-flow filter systems
» Four-beam turbidity control with 90° / 180° measurement complies with critical industry standards such as MEBAK and EBC
The experimental setup
A test was conducted in collaboration with a brewery in the Netherlands, comparing an ITM-4DW turbidity meter with a competitor‘s device with 90° and 25° angles. Various liquids were pumped through a pipe sequentially and the values measured by both sensors were recorded in succession.
The liquids used were Water / Water with yeast, various concentrations / Unfiltered beer / Filtered beer / Filtered beer with PVPP, various concentrations / Filtered beer with silica gel and diatomaceous earth, various concentrations
Both sensors responded equally in all tests. In the case of filtered beer, both show a correct flat line. With each change caused by the addition of yeast, PVPP, or silica gel/diatomaceous earth, both sensors reliably showed a deflection in the measurement curves.

Conclusions for finished product filtration monitoring
The tests carried out clearly confirm that in many applications the ITM-4 turbidity sensor, with its very high measurement sensitivity starting at 0 NTU, is equivalent to but significantly less expensive compared to the much more expensive dual-angle sensors.
For breweries that use a candle or layer filter with diatomaceous earth, but do not need to measure the PVPP or silica gel dosage for filter media optimization, the ITM-4DW offers a reliable and extremely accurately programmable monitoring function. An increase in yeast, diatomaceous earth, PVPP, or silica gel concentration due to a malfunction in the filtration system is measured reliably with high precision and triggered as an alarm.
For breweries that use cross-flow filtration without diatomaceous earth as a filtration aid, the ITM-4DW can also be used to create automated process monitoring. Any malfunction is detected, as the corresponding turbidity values also increase in this case and are immediately determined with superior measurement sensitivity.
In both applications, the ITM-4DW enables breweries to implement cost-effective, yet highly accurate and reliable automated inline process monitoring against filter breakthrough.

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