Cooling Towers
OPEN RECIRCULATING COOLING SYSTEM
An open recirculating system uses the same water
repeatedly to cool process equipment.
Heat absorbed
from the process must be dissipated to allow reuse of the water. Cooling
towers, spray ponds, and evaporative condensers are used for this purpose.
Open
recirculating cooling systems save a tremendous amount of fresh water compared
to the alternative method, once-through cooling.
The quantity
of water discharged to waste is greatly reduced in the open recirculating
method, and chemical treatment is more economical.
However, open
recirculating cooling systems are inherently subject to more treatment-related
problems than once-through systems:
- cooling by evaporation
increases the dissolved solids concentration in the water, raising corrosion
and deposition tendencies
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- the relatively higher
temperatures significantly increase corrosion potential
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- the longer retention time
and warmer water in an open recirculating system increase the tendency for
biological growth
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- airborne gases such as
sulfur dioxide, ammonia or hydrogen sulfide can be absorbed from the air,
causing higher corrosion rates microorganisms, nutrients, and potential
foulants can also be absorbed into the water across the tower
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COOLING TOWERS
Cooling towers are the most common method used to dissipate
heat in open recirculating cooling systems.
They are
designed to provide intimate air/water contact. Heat rejection is primarily by
evaporation of part of the cooling water.
Some sensible
heat loss (direct cooling of the water by the air) also occurs, but it is only
a minor portion of the total heat rejection.
Types of Towers
Cooling towers are classified by the type of draft (natural
or mechanical) and the direction of airflow (crossflow or counterflow).
Mechanical draft towers are further subdivided into forced or induced draft
towers.
Natural draft
towers. Sometimes called "hyperbolic"
towers due to the distinctive shape and function of their chimneys, natural
draft towers do not require fans.
They are designed to take advantage of
the density difference between the air entering the tower and the warmer air
inside the tower.
The warm, moist air inside the tower has
a lower density, so it rises as denser, cool air is drawn in at the base of the
tower. The tall (up to 500 ft) chimney is necessary to induce adequate airflow.
Natural draft towers can be either
counterflow or crossflow designs. The tower pictured is a crossflow
model. The fill is external to the shell forming a ring around the base.
In a counterflow model, the fill is
inside the shell. In both models, the empty chimney accounts for most of the
tower height.
Mechanical Draft Towers. Mechanical
draft towers use fans to move air through the tower. In a forced draft design,
fans push air into the bottom of the tower.
Almost all forced draft towers are
counterflow designs. Induced draft towers have a fan at the top to draw air
through the tower.
These towers can use either crossflow or
counterflow air currents and tend to be larger than forced draft towers.
Counterflow
Towers. In counterflow towers, air moves upward,
directly opposed to the downward flow of water. This design provides good heat
exchange because the coolest air contacts the coolest water. Headers and spray
nozzles are usually used to distribute the water in counterflow towers
Crossflow Towers. In crossflow
towers, air flows horizontally across the downward flow of water. The crossflow
design provides an easier path for the air, thus increasing the airflow for a
given fan horsepower.
Crossflow towers usually have a
gravity feed system-a distribution deck with evenly spaced metering orifices to
distribute the water. Often, the deck is covered to retard algae growth.
Cooling Tower
Components
Fill Section. The
fill section is the most important part of the tower.
Packing or fill of various types is used
to keep the water distributed evenly and to increase the water surface area for
more efficient evaporation.
Originally, fill consisted of
"splash bars" made of redwood or pressure-treated fir. Splash bars
are now available in plastic as well. Other types of fill include plastic
splash grid, ceramic brick, and film fill.
Film fill has became very popular in
recent years. It consists of closely packed, corrugated, vertical sheets, which
cause the water to flow down through the tower in a very thin film.
Film fill is typically made of plastic.
Polyvinyl chloride (PVC) is commonly used for systems with a maximum water
temperature of 130°F or less. Chlorinated PVC (CPVC) can withstand temperatures
to approximately 165°F.
Film fill
provides more cooling capacity in a given space than splash fill. Splash fill
can be partially or totally replaced with film fill to in-crease the capacity
of an existing cooling tower.
Because of the
very close spacing, film fill is very susceptible to various types of
deposition. Calcium carbonate scaling and fouling with suspended solids has
occurred in some systems.
Process
contaminants, such as oil and grease, can be direct foulants and/or lead to
heavy biological growth on the fill. Any type of deposition can severely reduce
the cooling efficiency of the tower.
Louvers. Louvers. Louvers are used to help direct airflow into
the tower and minimize the amount of windage loss (water being splashed or
blown out the sides of the tower).
Drift Eliminators. Drift Eliminators. "Drift" is a term used
to describe droplets of water entrained in the air leaving the top of the
tower. Because drift has the same composition as the circulating water, it
should not be confused with evaporation. Drift should be minimized because it
wastes water and can cause staining on buildings and autos at some distance
from the tower. Drift eliminators abruptly change the direction of airflow,
imparting centrifugal force to separate water from the air. Early drift
eliminators were made of redwood in a herringbone structure. Modern drift
eliminators are typically made of plastic and come in many different shapes.
They are more effective in removing drift than the early wood versions, yet
cause less pressure drop.
Approach to Wet
Bulb, Cooling Range
Cooling towers
are designed to cool water to a certain temperature under a given set of
conditions.
The "wet
bulb temperature" is the lowest temperature to which water can be cooled
by evaporation. It is not practical to design a tower to cool to the wet bulb
temperature.
The difference
between the cold sump temperature and the wet bulb temperature is called the
"approach."
Towers are
typically designed with a 7-15°F approach. The temperature difference between
the hot return water and the cold sump water is referred to as the
"cooling range" (DT). Cooling range is usually around 10-25°F but can
be as high as 40°F in some systems.
CYCLES OF CONCENTRATION, WATER BALANCE
Calculation of
Cycles of Concentration
Water
circulates through the process exchangers and over the cooling tower at a rate
referred to as the "recirculation rate."
Water is lost
from the system through evaporation and blowdown. For calculation purposes,
blowdown is defined as all nonevaporative water losses (windage, drift, leaks,
and intentional blowdown).
Makeup is
added to the system to replace evaporation and blowdown.
Approximately
1000 Btu of heat is lost from the water for every pound of water evaporated.
This is equal to evaporation of about 1% of the cooling water for each 10°F
temperature drop across the cooling tower.
The following
equation describes this relationship between evaporation, recirculation rate, and
temperature change:
where:
E = evaporation, gpm
RR = recirculation rate, gpm
DT = cooling range, °F
F = evaporation factor
The
evaporation factor, F, equals 1 when all cooling comes from
evaporation.
For
simplicity, this is often assumed to be the case. In reality, F varies with
relative humidity and dry bulb temperature. The actual F value for a system is
generally between 0.75 and 1.0, but can be as low as 0.6 in very cold weather.
As pure water
is evaporated, minerals are left behind in the circulating water, making it
more concentrated than the makeup water.
Note that
blowdown has the same chemical composition as circulating water. "Cycles
of concentration" (or "cycles") are a comparison of the
dissolved solids level of the blowdown with the makeup water.
At 3 cycles of
concentration, blowdown has three times the solids concentration of the makeup.
Cycles can be
calculated by comparison of the concentrations of a soluble component in the
makeup and blowdown streams.
Because
chloride and sulfate are soluble even at very high concentrations, they are
good choices for measurement.
However, the
calculation results could be invalid if either chlorine or sulfuric acid is fed
to the system as part of a water treatment program.
Cycles based
on conductivity are often used as an easy way to automate blowdown.
However,
cycles based on conductivity can be slightly higher than cycles based on
individual species, due to the addition of chlorine, sulfuric acid, and
treatment chemicals.
Cycles of concentration can also
be expressed as follows:
where:
MU = makeup (evaporation +
blowdown), gpm
BD = blowdown, gpm
Note that the
relationship based on flow rate in gallons per minute is the inverse of the
concentration relationship.
If E + BD is substituted for MU
:
where:
E = evaporation
Solving for
blowdown, this equation becomes:
This is a very
useful equation in cooling water treatment.
After the
cycles of concentration have been determined based on makeup and blowdown
concentrations, the actual blowdown being lost from the system, or the blowdown
required to maintain the system at the desired number of cycles, can be
calculated.
Because
treatment chemicals are not lost through evaporation, only treatment chemicals
lost through blowdown (all nonevaporative water loss) must be replaced.
Thus,
calculation of blowdown is critical in determining treatment feed rates and
costs.
Factors Limiting
Cycles of Concentration
Physical Limitations. There is a limit to the number of cycles
attainable in a cooling tower.
Windage, drift, and leakage are all
sources of unintentional blowdown. Drift losses of up to 0.2% of the
recirculation rate in older towers can limit cycles to 5-10.
Additional losses due to leaks and
windage can further limit some older systems. New towers often carry drift
guarantees of 0.02% of recirculation rate or less.
Newly constructed systems that use towers
with highly efficient drift eliminators and have no extraneous losses may be
mechanically capable of achieving 50-100 cycles or more.
Chemical Limitations. As a
water's dissolved solids level increases, corrosion and deposition tendencies
increase. Because corrosion is an electrochemical reaction, higher conductivity
due to higher dissolved solids increases the corrosion rate.
It becomes progressively more difficult
and expensive to inhibit corrosion as the specific conductance approaches and
exceeds 10,000 Āµmho.
Some salts
have inverse temperature solubility; i.e., they are less soluble at higher
temperature and thus tend to form deposits on hot exchanger tubes.
Many salts
also are less soluble at higher pH. As cooling tower water is concentrated and
pH increases, the tendency to precipitate scale-forming salts increases.
Because it is one of the least soluble
salts, calcium carbonate is a common scale former in open recirculating cooling
systems.
Calcium and magnesium silicate, calcium
sulfate, and other types of scale can also occur. In the absence treatment
there is a wide range in the relative solubility of calcium carbonate and gypsum, the
form of calcium sulfate normally found in cooling systems.
Calcium
carbonate scaling can be predicted qualitatively by the Langelier Saturation
Index (LSI) and Ryznar Stability Index (RSI). The indices are determined as
follows:
Langelier Saturation Index = pHa - pHs
Ryznar Stability Index = 2(pHs) - pHa
The value pHs
(pH of saturation) is a function of total solids, temperature, calcium, and
alkalinity. pHa is the actual pH of the water.
A positive LSI
indicates a tendency for calcium carbonate to deposit. The Ryznar Stability
Index shows the same tendency when a value of 6.0 or less is calculated.
With or
without chemical treatment of the cooling water, cycles of concentration are
eventually limited by an inability to prevent scale formation.
DEPOSITION CONTROL
As noted earlier, there are many contaminants in cooling
water that contribute to deposit problems.
Three major
types of deposition are discussed here: scaling, general fouling, and
biological fouling.
Scale Formation
Scale formation in a cooling system can be controlled by:
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minimizing cycles of concentration through blowdown
control
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adding acid to prevent deposition of pH-sensitive species
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softening the water to reduce calcium
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using scale inhibitors to allow operation under
supersaturated conditions
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Blowdown Control. Increasing
blowdown to limit cycles of concentration is an effective way to reduce the
scaling potential of circulating water.
However, high rates of blowdown are not
always tolerable and, depending on water quality, cannot always provide
complete scale control. In many localities, supplies of fresh water are limited
and costly.
Table 31-1. Makeup and blowdown rates at various cycles a
Cycles
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Makeup, gpm
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Blowdown, Gpm
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2
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2000
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1000
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4
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1330
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333
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8
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1140
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143
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15
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1070
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71
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20
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1050
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53
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a RR =
50,000 gpm; DT = 20 °F.
The CO2 formed
is vented across the cooling tower, while sulfate remains as a by-product.
Lowering pH
through acid feed also reduces the scaling tendencies of other pH-sensitive
species such as magnesium silicate, zinc hydroxide, and calcium phosphate.
Because
control of acid feed is critical, an automated feed system should be used.
Overfeed of
acid contributes to excessive corrosion; loss of acid feed can lead to rapid
scale formation. An acid dilution system should be used for proper mixing to
prevent acid attack of the concrete sump.
When makeup
water sulfate is high and/or the tower is operated at high cycles, sulfuric
acid feed can lead to calcium sulfate scaling.
Sometimes,
hydrochloric acid is used instead of sulfuric acid in such cases. However, this
can result in high chloride levels, which often contribute significantly to
increased corrosion rates-especially pitting and/or stress cracking of
stainless steel.
Injection of
carbon dioxide into the circulating water to control pH has been proposed
occasionally. Such treatment reduces pH but does not reduce alkalinity.
The
circulating water is aerated each time it passes over the cooling tower. This
reduces the carbon dioxide concentration in the water to the equilibrium value
for the atmospheric conditions, causing the pH to rise.
The rapid
increase in pH across the tower can lead to calcium carbonate scaling on the
tower fill.
Because of
aeration, carbon dioxide does not cycle and must be fed based on system
recirculation rate. It is generally not considered a practical means of
controlling pH in open recirculating systems.
Water Softening. Lime softening of
the makeup or a sidestream can be used to lower the calcium and, often,
alkalinity.
This reduces both the calcium carbonate
and calcium sulfate scaling tendencies of the water at a given number of cycles
and pH level. Sidestream lime softening is also used to lower silica levels.
Scale Inhibitors. Cooling systems
can be operated at higher cycles of concentration and/or higher pH when
appropriate scale inhibitors are applied.
These materials interfere with crystal
growth, permitting operation at "supersaturated" conditions.
Organic phosphates, also called
phosphonates, are commonly used to inhibit calcium carbonate scale.
Phosphonates or various polymeric
materials can be used to inhibit other types of scale, such as calcium sulfate
and calcium phosphate.
There is a
relatively high-quality makeup water at various cycles of concentration. With
no chemical additives of any type, this water is limited to 2 cycles.
At 5 cycles
the pH is approximately 8.3, and the LSI is +1.5. The system can be operated
without acid feed if a scale inhibitor is used.
At 10 cycles
with no acid feed, the LSI is +2.5 and the water is treatable with a calcium
carbonate scale inhibitor. At 15 cycles and no acid feed, the theoretical pH is
9.2 and the LSI is +3.2.
In this case,
the water cannot be treated effectively at 15 cycles with conventional calcium
carbonate inhibitors. Acid should be fed to reduce the pH to 8.7 or below so
that a scale inhibitor may be used.
Table 31-2. Recirculating cooling water at various cycles.
Circulating Water at
2 cycles |
Circulating Water at
5 cycles |
Circulating Water at 10 cycles
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Circulating Water at 15 cycles
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Makeup Water
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No Acid Feed
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No Acid Feed
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No Acid Feed
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No Acid Feed
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Acid for pH 8.7
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Calcium
(as CaCO3), ppm |
50
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100
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250
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500
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750
|
750
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Magnesium
(as CaCO3), ppm |
20
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40
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100
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300
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300
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300
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M Alkalinity
(as CaCO3), ppm |
40
|
80
|
200
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400
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600
|
310
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Sulfate
(as SO4-2), ppm |
40
|
80
|
200
|
400
|
600
|
890
|
Chloride (as Cl-
|
10
|
20
|
50
|
100
|
150
|
150
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Silica (as SiO2), ppm
|
10
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20
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50
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100
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150
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150
|
pH
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7.0
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7.6
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8.3
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8.9
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9.2
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8.7
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pHs (120 °F)
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8.2
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7.6
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6.8
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6.4
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6.0
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6.2
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LSI
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-1.2
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0
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+1.5
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+2.5
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+3.2
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+2.5
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RSI
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9.4
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7.6
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5.3
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3.9
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2.8
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3.7
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CaCO3 Controlled by a:
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B
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B/S
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B/S
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X
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B/A/S
|
a B,
blowdown only; B/S, blowdown plus scale inhibitor; B/A/S, blowdown plus aid
plus CaCO3 scale inhibitor; X, cannot operate.
General Fouling
Control
Species that do not form scale (iron, mud, silt, and other
debris) can also cause deposition problems.
Because these
materials are composed of solid particles, their deposition is often more
flow-related than heat-related.
Suspended
solids tend to drop out in low-flow areas, such as the tower sump and heat
exchangers with cooling water on the shell side.
In addition to
serving as a water reservoir, the tower sump provides a settling basin. The
accumulated solids can be removed from the sump periodically by vacuum or
shoveling methods.
Natural and
synthetic polymers of various types can be used to minimize fouling in heat
exchangers.
Organic
process contaminants, such as oil and grease, can enter a system through
exchanger leaks. Surfactants can be used to mitigate the effects of these
materials.
Biological
Fouling Control
An open
recirculating cooling system provides a favorable environment for biological
growth. If this growth is not controlled, severe biological fouling and
accelerated corrosion can occur. Corrosion inhibitors and deposit control
agents cannot function effectively in the presence of biological accumulations.
A complete
discussion of microorganisms and control of biological fouling can be found in
Chapter 26. Oxidizing antimicrobials (e.g., chlorine and halogen donors) are
discussed in Chapter 27.
The addition
of a single corrosion inhibitor, such as phosphate or zinc, is not sufficient
for effective treatment of an open recirculating cooling system. A
comprehensive treatment program that addresses corrosion and all types of
deposition is required. All corrosion inhibitor programs require a good
biological control program and, in some cases, supplemental deposit control
agents for specific foulants.
Chromate-Based
Programs
For many years, programs based on chromate provided
excellent corrosion protection for cooling systems.
However, it
was soon recognized that chromate, as a heavy metal, had certain health and
environmental hazards associated with it.
Treatments
employing chromate alone at 200-500 ppm rapidly gave way to programs such as
"Zinc Dianodic," which incorporated zinc and phosphate to reduce
chromate levels to 15-25 ppm.
Federal
regulations limiting discharge of chromate to receiving streams sparked further
efforts to reduce or eliminate chromate. The most recent concern relating to
chromate treatment involves chromate present in cooling tower drift.
When inhaled,
hexavalent chrome is a suspected carcinogen. Therefore, as of May 1990, the use
of chromate in comfort cooling towers was banned by the EPA.
It is expected
that chromate use in open recirculating cooling systems will be banned
altogether by the end of 1993.
Copper Corrosion
Inhibitors
Chromate is a good corrosion inhibitor for copper as well
as steel. Therefore, no specific copper corrosion inhibitor was needed in most
chromate-based programs.
However, most
other mild steel inhibitors do not effectively protect copper alloys.
Therefore,
nonchromate programs generally include a specific copper corrosion inhibitor
when copper alloys are present in the system.
Early
Phosphate/Phosphonate Programs
Many early corrosion treatment programs used polyphosphate
at relatively high levels.
In water,
polyphosphate undergoes a process of hydrolysis, commonly called
"reversion," which returns it to its orthophosphate state. In early
programs, this process often resulted in calcium orthophosphate deposition.
Later
improvements used combinations of ortho-, poly-, and organic phosphates. The
general treatment ranges are as follows:
Orthophosphate
|
2-10 ppm
|
Polyphosphate
|
2-10 ppm
|
Phosphonate
|
2-10 ppm
|
pH
|
6.5-8.5
|
A more
specific set of control limits within these ranges was developed, based on
individual water characteristics and system operating conditions.
Where
low-calcium waters were used (i.e., less than 75 ppm), zinc was often added to
provide the desired corrosion protection.
With close
control of phosphate levels, pH, and cycles, it was possible to achieve
satisfactory corrosion protection with minimal deposition. However, there was
little room for error, and calcium phosphate deposition was frequently a problem.
Dianodic II ®
The Dianodic II ® concept revolutionized non-chromate
treatment technology with its introduction in 1979.
This program
uses relatively high levels of orthophosphate to promote a protective oxide
film on mild steel surfaces, providing superior corrosion inhibition.
The use of
high phosphate levels was made possible by the development of superior
acrylate-based copolymers.
These polymers
are capable of keeping high levels of orthophosphate in solution under typical
cooling water conditions, eliminating the problem of calcium phosphate
deposition encountered with previous programs.
The general
control ranges for Dianodic II are as follows:
Total
inorganic phosphate
|
10-25 ppm
|
Calcium (as
CaCO3)
|
75-1200 ppm
|
pH
|
6.8-7.8
|
More detailed control ranges are
developed for individual systems, based on water characteristics and system
operating conditions.
Dianodic II programs have been
successfully protecting cooling systems since their introduction.
Continuing research has yielded many
improvements in this treatment approach, including newer, more effective
polymers, which have expanded the applicability to more diverse water
chemistries.
The most widely used treatment program,
Dianodic II, is an industry standard in nonchromate treatment.
Alkaline
Treatment Programs
There are several advantages to operating a cooling system
in an alkaline pH range of 8.0-9.2.
- First, the water is inherently
less corrosive than at lower pH.
- Second, feed of sulfuric acid can be minimized or even
eliminated, depending on the makeup water chemistry and desired cycles. A
system using this makeup could run an an alkaline treatment program in the 4-10
cycle range with no acid feed.
This eliminates
the high cost of properly maintaining an acid feed system, along with the
safety hazards and handling problems associated with acid.
Even if acid cannot be eliminated, there
is still an advantage to alkaline operation. A pH of 8.0-9.0 corresponds to an
alkalinity range more than twice that of pH 7.0-8.0.
Therefore, pH is more easily
controlled at higher pH, and the higher alkalinity provides more buffering
capacity in the event of acid overfeed.
A disadvantage
of alkaline operation is the increased potential to form calcium carbonate and
other calcium- and magnesium-based scales.
This can limit
cycles of concentration and necessitate the use of deposit control agents.
Alkaline Zinc
Programs. One of the most effective alkaline programs relies on a
combination of zinc and organic phosphate (phosphonate) for corrosion
inhibition.
Zinc is an excellent cathodic inhibitor
that allows operation at lower calcium and alkalinity levels than other
alkaline treatments.
However, discharge of cooling tower
blowdown containing zinc may be severely limited due to its aquatic toxicity.
Zinc-based programs are most applicable
in plants where zinc can be removed in the waste treatment process.
Alkaline Phosphate Programs. Combinations of
organic and inorganic phosphates are also used to inhibit corrosion at alkaline
pH.
Superior synthetic polymer technology has
been applied to eliminate many of the fouling problems encountered with early
phosphate/phosphonate programs.
Because of the higher pH and alkalinity,
the required phosphate levels are lower than in Dianodic II treatments. General
treatment ranges are as follows:
Inorganic phosphate 2-10 ppm
Organic phosphate 3-8 ppm
Calcium (as CaCO3) 75-1200 ppm
pH 8.0-9.2
All-Organic
Programs
All-organic programs use no inorganic phosphates or zinc.
Corrosion
protection is provided by phosphonates and organic film-forming inhibitors.
These programs typically require a pH range of 8.7-9.2 to take advantage of
calcium carbonate as a cathodic inhibitor.
Molybdate-Based
Programs
In order to be effective, molybdate alone requires very
high treatment concentrations.
Therefore, it
is usually applied at lower levels (e.g., 2-20 ppm) and combined with other
inhibitors, such as inorganic and organic phosphates.
Many
investigators believe that molybdate, at the levels mentioned above, is
effective in controlling pitting on mild steel.
Because
molybdate is more expensive than most conventional corrosion inhibitors on a
parts per million basis, the benefit of molybdate addition must be weighed
against the incremental cost.
Use of
molybdate may be most appropriate where phosphate and/or zinc discharge is
limited.
FUTURE CONSIDERATIONS
The chemical influence of cooling system blowdown on
receiving streams is being closely scrutinized in the United States, where the
cleanup of waterways is a high priority.
Zinc and
phosphate effluent limitations are in place in many states. Extensive research
to develop new, more "environmentally friendly" treatment programs is
underway and likely to continue.
Extensive
testing to determine toxicity and environmental impact of new molecules will be
required.
The answers
are not simple, and the new programs are likely to be more expensive than
current technology.
MONITORING AND CONTROL OF COOLING WATER TREATMENT
There are many factors that contribute to corrosion and
fouling in cooling water systems.
The choice and
application of proper treatment chemicals is only a small part of the solution.
Sophisticated
monitoring programs are needed to identify potential problems so that treatment
programs can be modified.
Effective
control of product feed and monitoring of chemical residuals is needed to
fine-tune treatment programs.
Continued
monitoring is necessary to confirm treatment results and determine system
trends.
Monitoring of
Treatment Results
Although simple monitoring tools may reveal problems, they
may give no indication of the cause.
No monitoring
tool can duplicate system conditions exactly. It is also necessary to inspect
plant equipment frequently and document the results.
Corrosion. Corrosion rates can be monitored by means of
corrosion coupons, instantaneous corrosion rate meters, or the Betz Monitall,
which measures the corrosion rate on heat transfer surfaces. Elevated iron or
copper levels in the circulating water can also be an indication of corrosion.
Deposition. Deposition tendencies can be observed on corrosion
coupons or heated apparatus, such as test heat exchangers or the Betz Monitall.
A comparison of various mineral concentrations and suspended solids levels in
the makeup water to those in the blowdown may indicate the loss of some
chemical species due to deposition.
Biological
Fouling. Many techniques are available to monitor biological
fouling. Those that monitor biological growth on actual or simulated system
surfaces provide a good measure of system conditions. Bulk water counts of
various species may be misleading.
Control of Water
Parameters and Treatment Feed
Although some treatment programs are more forgiving than
others, even the best program requires good control of cycles, pH, and
treatment levels. Good control saves money.
In the short term, improved control
optimizes treatment levels, prevents overfeed, and minimizes chemical
consumption.
In the long term, cleaner heat exchanger
surfaces, less frequent equipment replacement, and reduced downtime for
cleaning and repair combine to improve system efficiency, contributing to
higher profitability for the plant.
Often, computerized feed and control
systems are so effective in these areas that they soon pay for themselves.
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