Free Chlorine Monitor vs ORP for Halogen control

Free Chlorine Monitor vs ORP for Halogen control

Answer First

  1. ORP control is
    1. cost-effective
    2. simple
    3. less precise, especially in variable pH or organic-laden systems.
  2. Free chlorine sensors calibrated for HOBr offer
    1. direct control,
    2. accurate control
      1. ideal when biofilm risk is high
      2. residuals must be tightly managed
  • or data reporting and compliance are required.
  1. Free chlorine sensors calibrated for HOBr are best available technology
    1. In systems
  1. using on-site generated bromine (e.g., bleach + NaBr),
  2. where pH and demand fluctuate,
  • Where better and more accurate control is needed

Feature

ORP Control

Free Chlorine Sensor (HOBr-Calibrated)

What It Measures

Oxidation-reduction potential (mV)

Free halogen (HOBr/Br₂O, not total bromine) in ppm

Response Type

Indirect (electrochemical potential)

Direct (concentration of free bromine residual)

Accuracy for HOBr

Moderate – affected by pH, biofilm, metals

High – if calibrated specifically for HOBr at tower pH

Influenced by System pH

Strongly – ORP readings shift significantly with pH

Less – as long as sensor is pH-compensated or matched to target range

Impact of Contaminants

Sensitive to reducing agents, organics, and iron

Can be fouled by scale or organics but gives discrete value

Response Time

Fast

Fast

Maintenance Requirements

Low to moderate (depends on probe fouling)

Moderate (sensor membrane and calibration checks)

Control Setpoint

Setpoint in mV (e.g., 700–750 mV)

Setpoint in ppm (e.g., 1.5–2.0 ppm free HOBr)

Reliability for Biofilm Control

Limited in variable chemistry

More reliable – directly targets HOBr levels

Cost

Lower (basic ORP controllers)

Higher (HOBr-specific sensors and calibration kits)

Ideal Use Case

General oxidant control in simple or stable systems

Systems requiring precise HOBr dosing (e.g., cooling towers with variable demand)