Why Glycol Concentration Measurement Matters
Glycol-based fluids are the backbone of thermal management across virtually every industrial sector. Ethylene glycol and propylene glycol — the two most widely used heat transfer fluids — are essential for antifreeze formulations in automotive and industrial cooling systems, for HVAC secondary refrigeration loops, for deicing fluids in aviation and infrastructure, for cryopreservation in pharmaceutical and food processing, and as chemical intermediates in polyester resin production and polyurethane synthesis.
In automotive and heavy equipment coolant systems, glycol concentration measurement directly determines the freeze protection and boil-over protection performance of the coolant. A coolant at 50% ethylene glycol by volume provides freeze protection to approximately -36°C and boil-over protection to approximately 108°C. As the glycol concentration decreases through topping up with water or through glycol degradation, these protection margins erode rapidly. A coolant at 30% ethylene glycol freezes at approximately -15°C — insufficient protection for winter operation in cold climates.
In HVAC secondary refrigeration loops using propylene glycol or ethylene glycol brines, the glycol concentration determines the brine’s heat transfer efficiency, viscosity, and minimum operating temperature. As glycol concentration increases, viscosity increases and pumping energy rises — but the minimum achievable temperature decreases. Precise glycol concentration control optimizes the balance between operating temperature range and pumping energy consumption.
In aviation deicing operations, glycol concentration measurement of runway deicing fluids and aircraft deicing sprays is critical for both operational effectiveness and environmental compliance. The US EPA Aircraft Deicing Fluid rule (40 CFR Part 449) and equivalent European regulations impose limits on glycol content in stormwater runoff — requiring airports to monitor and manage glycol usage carefully.
This article is a practical guide to glycol concentration measurement — covering the measurement principles, the glycol-water density-concentration relationship, instrument types, accuracy requirements, and how to select the right inline concentration analyzer for your specific glycol application.
Understanding Ethylene Glycol vs Propylene Glycol
Before selecting a glycol concentration measurement approach, it is essential to understand the differences between the two primary glycol types, as their density-concentration relationships differ significantly.
Ethylene Glycol (EG, C₂H₆O₂) is the most widely used heat transfer fluid for automotive and industrial cooling applications. It has superior heat transfer properties compared to propylene glycol — approximately 15-20% higher thermal conductivity and lower viscosity at equivalent concentrations — making it preferred for high-performance and high-power-density cooling applications. However, ethylene glycol is toxic to humans and animals (oral LD50 approximately 4,700 mg/kg body weight), which restricts its use in food, pharmaceutical, and certain HVAC applications where fluid exposure to humans is possible.
Propylene Glycol (PG, C₃H₈O₂) is classified as “generally recognized as safe” (GRAS) by the US FDA and is the preferred glycol for food processing, pharmaceutical, and indirect food contact applications. It is less toxic than ethylene glycol (oral LD50 approximately 20,000 mg/kg body weight), making it the standard choice for HVAC systems in buildings where glycol leakage could contact occupants or food products. Propylene glycol has slightly lower thermal conductivity and higher viscosity than ethylene glycol at equivalent concentrations, but the difference is negligible for most HVAC and process cooling applications.
The Glycol-Water Density-Concentration Relationship
The foundation of any inline glycol concentration measurement strategy is the glycol-water density-concentration relationship. Unlike the highly non-monotonic relationship of sulfuric acid, glycol solutions show a monotonically increasing density with concentration across the full 0-100% range — for both ethylene glycol and propylene glycol. This means a single density measurement can be unambiguously converted to concentration, simplifying both calibration and process control.
Ethylene glycol density at 20°C:
| EG Concentration (%) | Density (g/cm³) | Freezing Point (°C) | Boiling Point (°C) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0 (pure water) | 1.0000 | 0 | 100 |
| 10 | 1.0135 | -3 | 101 |
| 20 | 1.0275 | -8 | 103 |
| 30 | 1.0400 | -15 | 104 |
| 40 | 1.0515 | -23 | 106 |
| 50 | 1.0625 | -36 | 108 |
| 60 | 1.0730 | -52 | 109 |
| 70 | 1.0830 | -65 | 111 |
| 80 | 1.0920 | -99 (crystallizes) | 113 |
| 90 | 1.1000 | — | 115 |
| 100 (pure EG) | 1.1130 | -13 | 197 |
Propylene glycol density at 20°C:
| PG Concentration (%) | Density (g/cm³) | Freezing Point (°C) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0 (pure water) | 1.0000 | 0 | Reference |
| 10 | 1.0095 | -2 | Light concentration |
| 20 | 1.0195 | -6 | Typical HVAC loop |
| 30 | 1.0300 | -12 | Standard HVAC glycol |
| 40 | 1.0415 | -22 | Cold climate HVAC |
| 50 | 1.0530 | -33 | Deep freeze protection |
| 60 | 1.0640 | -55 | Aviation deicing |
| 70 | 1.0745 | -75 | Maximum freeze protection |
| 100 (pure PG) | 1.1035 | -59 | Pure propylene glycol |
Temperature sensitivity: The thermal expansion coefficient of glycol solutions is approximately 0.0004-0.0008 g/cm³ per °C, depending on concentration and type. This is higher than water alone and comparable to NaOH solutions. Automatic temperature compensation is essential for accurate glycol concentration determination. A 10°C temperature deviation from calibration conditions will produce a concentration error of approximately ±0.5-1.0% without compensation.
Methods of Glycol Concentration Measurement
Three primary technologies are used for glycol concentration measurement in industrial applications. The optimal choice depends on the glycol type, concentration range, process temperature, and required accuracy.
1. Refractometer
Principle: Measures the refractive index (RI) of the glycol solution. Refractive index correlates uniquely to concentration via calibration curve. Refractometers are the most widely used instruments for glycol concentration measurement in coolant and antifreeze applications.
| Pros | Cons |
|---|---|
| Simple, well-established technology | Limited to narrow concentration ranges in practice |
| Portable instruments available | Prism window requires cleaning in dirty applications |
| Widely available and inexpensive | Calibration drift over time |
| Good for spot checks and laboratory measurement | Affected by dissolved additives (corrosion inhibitors, dyes) in coolant formulations |
| No power required for optical models | Not suitable for continuous inline process control in most cases |
Digital handheld refractometers are the standard tool for measuring antifreeze concentration in automotive service bays, HVAC maintenance operations, and industrial coolant management. They measure refractive index and convert it to °Brix, which is then correlated to glycol concentration. The standard reference is 20°C; temperature compensation is built into digital instruments but manual correction tables are required for analog refractometers.
2. Tuning Fork Density Meter (Vibrating Element)
Principle: A pair of fork tines vibrates at its natural resonant frequency. The resonant frequency shifts with fluid density according to ρ = A(1/f²) + B. The instrument converts frequency shift to density, then applies the glycol-water density-temperature table to output concentration.
This is the preferred technology for continuous inline glycol concentration measurement in industrial and HVAC applications.
| Pros | Cons |
|---|---|
| No radioactive source | Fork tines contact the process fluid |
| High accuracy: ±0.001-0.005 g/cm³ | Maximum density limited to ~3 g/cm³ |
| ±0.2-0.5% concentration accuracy (glycol range) | Fork can accumulate biofilm in stagnant glycol loops |
| Fast response: <1 second | Requires process connection (flange/thread) |
| No moving parts (except vibrating fork) | |
| Continuous inline measurement |
The LONN-700C tuning fork density meter with 316L stainless steel wetted materials is the standard recommendation for inline glycol concentration measurement in HVAC loops, industrial cooling systems, and chemical processing applications. The 316L stainless steel is fully compatible with both ethylene glycol and propylene glycol, including commercial coolant formulations with corrosion inhibitor packages.
3. Ultrasonic Acoustic Impedance Concentration Analyzer
Principle: An ultrasonic pulse is transmitted through the process fluid. The acoustic impedance of the fluid (product of density and speed of sound) is measured. For glycol-water mixtures, acoustic impedance correlates uniquely to concentration across a wide range.
| Pros | Cons |
|---|---|
| No wetted fork — no mechanical intrusion | Accuracy typically ±0.5-1.0% concentration |
| No fouling from biofilm or suspended particles | Requires careful mounting alignment |
| No corrosion of sensor surface | Temperature compensation is critical for accuracy |
| Good for glycol loops with corrosion inhibitor additives | Less accurate than tuning fork for precise glycol concentration |
| Excellent for large HVAC systems with glycol loops |
The LONN-7000 ultrasonic instrument is well-suited for large HVAC secondary refrigeration systems where the glycol loop may contain corrosion inhibitor additives, biocide treatments, and suspended particles from pipe corrosion. The non-contact measurement principle handles these conditions without sensor fouling.
Glycol Concentration Measurement in Automotive and Heavy Equipment Coolant
The automotive and heavy equipment coolant market represents the largest single application of glycol concentration measurement. Engine coolant (also called antifreeze) is a mixture of ethylene glycol or propylene glycol, purified water, and a corrosion inhibitor package (organic acid inhibitors, azoles, silicates, nitrates, and phosphates).
Why coolant concentration matters:
Coolant concentration determines three critical performance parameters:
- Freeze protection: The freezing point of the coolant. As concentration decreases, freeze protection erodes. Below 30% ethylene glycol, freeze protection becomes marginal for most cold climate applications.
- Boil-over protection: The boiling point of the coolant. Higher glycol concentration raises the boiling point. In high-performance engines and heavy-duty equipment operating at elevated temperatures, boil-over protection is essential.
- Corrosion inhibitor dilution: The corrosion inhibitor package concentration scales with coolant concentration. As glycol is diluted (through topping up with water), inhibitor concentration also dilutes — increasing the risk of corrosion in the cooling system.
Recommended measurement frequency:
| Application | Measurement Frequency | Method |
|---|---|---|
| Automotive service/maintenance | Every coolant change (~2-3 years or 40,000-80,000 km) | Digital refractometer |
| Heavy equipment (mining, construction) | Every 250-500 operating hours | Digital refractometer or inline density meter |
| Industrial process cooling | Continuous inline monitoring | Tuning fork density meter (LONN-700CM) |
| HVAC secondary loops | Monthly spot check or continuous inline | Refractometer (spot) or LONN-700CM (inline) |
Glycol Concentration Measurement in HVAC Systems
Commercial buildings, data centers, district heating networks, and industrial facilities increasingly use glycol secondary loops for heat transfer — particularly in climates where freeze protection is required or where the primary refrigerant is ammonia or another fluid that should not circulate directly in occupied spaces.
Typical HVAC glycol loop operating conditions:
| Parameter | Typical Value | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Glycol Type | Propylene glycol (preferred for occupied buildings) or Ethylene glycol | Propylene glycol GRAS/FDA approved for indirect food contact |
| Concentration | 20-40% (standard HVAC) / 40-50% (cold climate) | Determines minimum operating temperature |
| Loop Temperature | -10°C to +50°C (process side) | Glycol viscosity increases at low temperature |
| Pressure | 2-10 bar (closed loop) | Instrument must match loop pressure rating |
| Inhibitor Package | Organic acid (OAT), hybrid, or nitrite-based | Additives affect refractive index measurement |
Inline vs spot measurement for HVAC glycol loops:
For small commercial HVAC systems (<500 kW cooling capacity), periodic spot measurement with a handheld refractometer is the most cost-effective approach. For large commercial buildings, data centers, and district heating networks, continuous inline measurement with a tuning fork density meter enables automated glycol concentration monitoring and early detection of dilution events — reducing maintenance costs and preventing freeze failures in winter.
Glycol Concentration Measurement in Aviation Deicing
Aviation deicing fluids (Type I, II, III, and IV) are glycol-based formulations used to remove ice, snow, and frost from aircraft surfaces and runway surfaces before takeoff and landing operations. The US EPA and international aviation authorities regulate the glycol content of deicing fluids and their stormwater runoff.
Deicing fluid glycol types and concentrations:
| Fluid Type | Primary Glycol | Typical Concentration |
|---|---|---|
| Type I (conventional) | Ethylene glycol | 80-95% (heated spray) |
| Type II (thickened) | Ethylene glycol or Propylene glycol | 50-60% |
| Type III (enhanced) | Propylene glycol | 40-60% |
| Type IV (holdover) | Propylene glycol | 40-60% |
Environmental compliance monitoring:
Airports must monitor glycol concentration in deicing fluid application and in stormwater runoff to comply with NPDES permits. Portable and inline refractometers are used for field verification of deicing fluid concentration before application. Inline density meters at stormwater collection points monitor runoff glycol concentration to verify permit compliance.
Temperature Compensation for Glycol Concentration Measurement
Temperature has a significant and predictable effect on glycol solution density — approximately 0.0004-0.0008 g/cm³ per degree Celsius depending on glycol type and concentration. Automatic temperature compensation is essential for accurate glycol concentration measurement.
The key specifications to verify when selecting an instrument for glycol concentration measurement:
- Temperature compensation algorithm: Must include the full glycol-water density-temperature table for your specific glycol type (ethylene glycol vs propylene glycol) and concentration range. A linear approximation is insufficient across a wide temperature range.
- Temperature range: Must cover your full process temperature range. HVAC glycol loops may operate from -15°C to +50°C; automotive coolant typically runs at 85-105°C; deicing fluids are heated to 60-80°C for application.
- Additive compatibility: Commercial coolant formulations contain corrosion inhibitor packages, dyes, and bittering agents (for ethylene glycol) that can affect the refractive index or density-to-concentration relationship. Verify the instrument’s algorithm accounts for typical additive packages, or confirm that measurement accuracy meets your requirements with additive effects included.
Application Guide: Selecting the Right Instrument for Your Glycol Application
Scenario 1: Automotive and Heavy Equipment Coolant Testing
Process conditions: 20-90°C (engine operating temperature), ethylene glycol or propylene glycol, commercial coolant with inhibitor package, periodic spot measurement
Recommended instrument: Digital handheld refractometer (spot measurement) or tuning fork density meter (continuous monitoring for fleet operations)
For periodic service bay testing, a digital handheld refractometer with automatic temperature compensation provides sufficient accuracy (±0.2% glycol concentration) at minimal cost. For fleet operations requiring continuous monitoring or automated glycol top-up control, the LONN-700CM inline tuning fork density meter provides continuous data for integration with fleet management systems.
Scenario 2: Commercial HVAC Glycol Loop Monitoring
Process conditions: -10°C to +50°C, 20-40% propylene glycol (typical), closed loop with corrosion inhibitor package, continuous monitoring preferred
Recommended instrument: Tuning fork density meter (LONN-700CM) with 316L stainless steel wetted materials
The LONN-700CM inline tuning fork density meter provides continuous glycol concentration monitoring for large HVAC systems. The 316L stainless steel wetted materials are fully compatible with commercial propylene glycol coolant formulations including OAT inhibitor packages. The 4-20mA output integrates with building automation systems (BAS) for automated glycol management.
Scenario 3: Data Center Cooling Systems
Process conditions: 5-35°C (precision cooling), 20-30% ethylene glycol, closed loop, high-reliability requirement, integration with DCIM systems
Recommended instrument: Tuning fork density meter (LONN-700CM) with 316L stainless steel wetted materials
Data centers require ultra-high reliability cooling systems. Glycol concentration monitoring ensures the coolant maintains adequate freeze protection and heat transfer efficiency. The LONN-700CM with Modbus RTU output integrates directly with Data Center Infrastructure Management (DCIM) platforms for centralized glycol monitoring and alerting.
Scenario 4: Aviation Deicing Operations — Environmental Compliance
Process conditions: 60-80°C (heated deicing fluid), 40-95% glycol (Type I-IV fluids), batch/spot measurement for compliance reporting
Recommended instrument: Digital refractometer (field verification) and inline density meter (stormwater runoff monitoring)
For field verification of deicing fluid concentration before application, a portable digital refractometer with wide-range temperature compensation is the standard tool. For stormwater runoff monitoring at collection points, inline density meters (LONN-700CM or LONN-7000) provide continuous data for EPA/NPDES compliance reporting.
Scenario 5: Pharmaceutical and Food Processing — Cryopreservation
Process conditions: -40°C to +25°C, propylene glycol solutions (GRAS-approved), pharmaceutical-grade purity, regulatory compliance (FDA, GMP)
Recommended instrument: Tuning fork density meter (LONN-700CM) with 316L stainless steel wetted materials, sanitary process connections
Propylene glycol is used as a cryoprotectant in pharmaceutical lyophilization (freeze-drying) and in food processing for controlled freezing applications. The LONN-700CM with sanitary tri-clamp connections meets food and pharmaceutical sanitary standards. The 316L stainless steel wetted materials are fully compatible with pharmaceutical-grade propylene glycol solutions.
Glycol Concentration Measurement Safety Considerations
Glycol-based coolants require attention to specific safety considerations:
- Toxicity of ethylene glycol: Ethylene glycol is toxic to humans and animals. Ingestion of even small quantities (as little as 100-500 mL for an adult) can cause serious health effects including kidney damage and can be fatal. All coolant handling operations must follow appropriate safety protocols. Commercial automotive antifreeze typically contains a bittering agent (denatonium benzoate) to reduce the risk of accidental ingestion, but this does not eliminate the toxicity hazard.
- Material compatibility: Verify wetted materials against the full glycol formulation including any inhibitor package, dyes, and additives. 316L stainless steel is generally compatible with commercial ethylene glycol and propylene glycol coolant formulations, but verify against your specific coolant brand and formulation.
- Thermal expansion: Glycol solutions have a higher coefficient of thermal expansion than water. In closed-loop systems, ensure the expansion tank is sized correctly for the glycol concentration and temperature range.
- Biocide management: Glycol loops that are not properly maintained can develop microbial growth (biofilm), which degrades coolant performance and can cause odor and health issues. Periodic biocide treatment is standard practice for glycol loops; verify biocide compatibility with the instrument’s wetted materials.
Installation Best Practices for Inline Glycol Concentration Analyzers
Based on field experience across HVAC, automotive, and industrial cooling applications:
- Bypass loop installation: Install the sensor in a bypass loop rather than directly in the main glycol line to facilitate maintenance without process interruption. A flow rate of 10-50 L/min maintains representative sampling in the bypass.
- Temperature stabilization: Allow the instrument to stabilize at process temperature for at least 30 minutes after installation before taking measurement readings for process control purposes.
- Minimum straight run: Maintain 5 pipe diameters of straight run upstream and 3 diameters downstream from the sensor in the bypass loop.
- Avoid stagnant conditions: Do not install in dead legs or areas of low flow where glycol stratification can occur.
- Avoid air entrainment: Ensure the glycol loop is properly vented and free of air bubbles, which can cause measurement errors in both density and ultrasonic instruments.
- Corrosion inhibitor monitoring: In addition to glycol concentration, monitor corrosion inhibitor effectiveness periodically. Low inhibitor concentration — even with correct glycol concentration — can lead to system corrosion.
- Calibration verification: Schedule periodic calibration verification against certified glycol-water reference standards. Annual verification is recommended for critical HVAC and industrial cooling applications.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between ethylene glycol and propylene glycol for cooling applications?
Ethylene glycol has superior thermal properties (approximately 15-20% higher thermal conductivity and lower viscosity at equivalent concentrations) and is preferred for high-performance and high-power-density cooling applications. However, ethylene glycol is toxic and is restricted in food, pharmaceutical, and occupied building applications. Propylene glycol is classified as GRAS (generally recognized as safe) by the US FDA and is the preferred choice for HVAC systems in occupied buildings, food processing, and pharmaceutical applications. The performance difference is negligible for most HVAC and process cooling applications.
How does temperature affect glycol concentration measurement?
Temperature has a significant effect on glycol solution density — approximately 0.0004-0.0008 g/cm³ per degree Celsius depending on glycol type and concentration. A 10°C temperature error without compensation produces a concentration error of approximately ±0.5-1.0%. All inline glycol concentration analyzers must include automatic temperature compensation using the glycol-water density-temperature table for the specific glycol type in use.
Can I use a refractometer for automotive coolant concentration measurement?
Yes, digital handheld refractometers are the standard tool for automotive coolant concentration testing in service bays and fleet maintenance operations. They measure refractive index and convert it to ethylene glycol or propylene glycol concentration. However, commercial coolant formulations contain corrosion inhibitor packages that can affect the refractive index reading — verify the refractometer’s calibration against your specific coolant brand, or accept a measurement uncertainty of approximately ±1-2% glycol concentration.
What concentration of glycol is needed for freeze protection?
For standard cold climate freeze protection: 30-40% ethylene glycol provides freeze protection to approximately -15°C to -23°C; 50% ethylene glycol provides freeze protection to approximately -36°C; 40-50% propylene glycol provides freeze protection to approximately -22°C to -33°C. For extreme cold climate applications (arctic regions), concentrations up to 60% may be used, but pumping energy increases significantly at these concentrations due to higher viscosity.
What accuracy is needed for glycol concentration control in HVAC loops?
For most HVAC glycol loop monitoring applications, ±0.5-1.0% glycol concentration accuracy is sufficient. This allows detection of dilution events (topping up with water) and ensures adequate freeze protection. For pharmaceutical and food processing applications requiring precise cryopreservation temperatures, ±0.2-0.5% accuracy is preferred. Tuning fork density meters achieve ±0.001 g/cm³ accuracy — corresponding to approximately ±0.1-0.2% concentration for typical glycol concentrations — well within all requirements.
Why LONNMETER for Glycol Concentration Measurement?
LONNMETER has deployed inline glycol concentration analyzers across the automotive, HVAC, aviation, pharmaceutical, and food processing industries:
For additional product information, see the inline density meter product overview and concentration meter solutions.
- Inline continuous monitoring: LONN-700CM tuning fork density meter provides ±0.001 g/cm³ accuracy — delivering ±0.1-0.2% glycol concentration resolution for precise control and early dilution detection
- 316L stainless steel compatibility: Full compatibility with commercial ethylene glycol and propylene glycol coolant formulations including OAT, hybrid, and nitrite-based inhibitor packages
- Wide temperature compensation: Full glycol-water density-temperature tables for both ethylene glycol and propylene glycol across the -40°C to +100°C operating range
- Explosion-proof certified: ATEX Ex d IIC T4/T6 and IECEx certifications available for hazardous glycol heating applications
- Application engineering support: Direct access to engineers with experience in HVAC, automotive, aviation deicing, and pharmaceutical glycol applications
Request a Quote
Need an inline glycol concentration measurement solution for your HVAC loop, coolant system, or deicing operation? Contact our application engineering team with your specific requirements — glycol type, concentration range, process temperature, pressure, application type, and any regulatory requirements — and we will recommend the optimal instrument configuration.
Email: anna@xalonn.com Brand: LONNMETER | smartmeasurer.com or Fill out our RFQ form
All LONNMETER inline concentration analyzers are manufactured in ISO 9001 certified facilities. ATEX and IECEx certifications available. Lead time: 2-4 weeks standard.