Optical Analysis
Comprehensive lab and process optical analysis systems for solids, liquids, slurries, particles and gases.
Optical Analysis
Optical analysis instruments use light–matter interaction to quantify composition, concentration, or impurities in real time, often without reagents or consumables. Endress+Hauser optical analysis portfolios typically include spectroscopy-based analyzers—such as Raman, near‑infrared, and laser absorption methods—implemented as in‑situ probes, extractive analyzer systems, or sample-cell solutions depending on the process.
The primary advantage is speed: optical measurements can deliver second-by-second insight that eliminates lab lag and reduces the need for grab sampling. This enables tighter control of batch endpoints, blending ratios, and impurity limits, improving product consistency and reducing off-spec production. Because many optical techniques are non-contact and non-destructive, they can also improve safety by minimizing exposure to hazardous fluids and reducing manual handling.
Typical applications include concentration control in chemical reactions, polymerization monitoring, crystallization tracking, and verification of solvent composition in pharmaceutical and specialty-chemical manufacturing. Laser absorption analyzers are widely applied for trace moisture or contaminants in gases—supporting natural-gas dehydration, compressor protection, hydrogen and syngas quality, and emissions-related monitoring. Optical methods are also effective where traditional wet-chemistry analyzers would be maintenance-intensive or too slow for dynamic processes.
Engineering considerations focus on achieving representative measurement conditions and protecting optical interfaces. Probe placement, window materials, purge strategies, temperature and pressure effects, and potential fouling must be addressed during design. For spectroscopy, calibration models and validation plans are as important as hardware selection; chemometric models may be tuned for feedstock variability and process transitions. Hazardous area approvals, enclosure ratings, and analyzer shelter design are selected to match plant standards.
Lifecycle success depends on maintaining optical cleanliness, managing calibration and model versions, and leveraging built-in diagnostics to detect signal loss or process interference. Integration with control systems and historians enables closed-loop control and data reconciliation, while remote support and digital documentation simplify troubleshooting. The result is continuous composition visibility that improves control quality, accelerates releases, and reduces sampling burden.
Carotek, an exclusive authorized representative of sales and service for Endress+Hauser.


