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Cooling Tower Water Treatment 101: Prevent Scale, Corrosion and Legionella

Cooling Tower Water Treatment 101: Prevent Scale, Corrosion and Legionella

April 22,2026

Introduction

An industrial cooling tower is one of the most water-intensive pieces of equipment in a manufacturing facility. A typical 500-ton cooling tower evaporates 3-5% of its circulating water volume every hour — meaning a 100 m3/hr system loses 3-5 m3 of water daily to evaporation alone. That constant water loss concentrates dissolved minerals, introduces airborne contaminants, and creates the perfect conditions for three costly problems: scale formation, corrosion, and microbiological growth, including Legionella bacteria.

Left untreated, cooling tower water causes measurable damage within months: heat transfer efficiency drops, energy consumption rises, equipment lifespan shortens, and in worst cases, Legionella colonization creates serious health and legal liability. This guide covers everything a facility manager needs to know about cooling tower water treatment — from water chemistry basics to a complete treatment program.

Understanding Cooling Tower Water Chemistry

The water in a cooling tower is not just water — it is a dynamic chemical environment that changes continuously. As water evaporates (the cooling tower's primary function), dissolved solids become concentrated. New water added to makeup the evaporation loss brings fresh dissolved minerals and oxygen. Air drawn through the tower brings airborne bacteria, dust, pollen, and organic matter.

The key parameters to monitor in cooling tower water are:

  • Total Dissolved Solids (TDS): The concentration of all dissolved minerals. Higher TDS = greater scaling potential. Target: below 1,500 mg/L for most systems, lower for systems with galvanized steel components.
  • pH Level: Determines whether water is scale-promoting or corrosive. Neutral range (7.0-8.0) is ideal. Below 7.0 = acidic, corrosive. Above 8.5 = alkaline, scale-promoting.
  • Hardness (Calcium Carbonate): Primary cause of scale deposits on heat transfer surfaces. Calcium hardness above 500 mg/L significantly increases scaling risk.
  • Chloride: Accelerates corrosion of stainless steel and galvanized steel. Keep below 300 mg/L for stainless steel systems, below 150 mg/L for galvanized systems.
  • Conductivity: A proxy measurement for TDS. Most modern treatment systems use conductivity probes for automatic blowdown control.

Problem 1: Scale Formation

What It Is

Scale is a hard, rock-like deposit that forms on heat transfer surfaces when dissolved minerals — primarily calcium carbonate (CaCO3), but also calcium sulfate, silica, and magnesium silicate — exceed their solubility limits and precipitate out of solution. Scale acts as an insulating layer: even a 1 mm layer of calcium carbonate scale reduces heat transfer efficiency by approximately 15-20%.

How to Identify

Scale appears as a white, off-white, or grayish crust on tower basin walls, fill surfaces, heat exchange tubes, and distribution nozzles. You may notice reduced cooling capacity, increased condensing temperatures, or higher than normal compressor discharge pressure in chilled water systems.

How to Prevent and Treat

  • Control TDS through automatic blowdown: Install a conductivity-controlled blowdown valve that opens automatically when conductivity exceeds setpoint. This is the single most effective scale control measure.
  • Use scale inhibitors (antiscalants): Phosphonate-based or polymer-based antiscalants (e.g., ATMP, HEDP, or polyacrylic acid derivatives) keep calcium carbonate in solution even at elevated concentrations. Dose according to manufacturer specifications based on tower water volume.
  • Maintain pH in the 7.5-8.0 range: Below 7.5 or above 8.5 accelerates different forms of scale formation.
  • Acid feed for high-hardness water: In areas with very hard makeup water (>400 mg/L as CaCO3), controlled sulfuric acid or citric acid dosing can lower pH to convert soluble calcium bicarbonate into insoluble but removable calcium sulfate.
  • Physical removal: For existing scale, professional chemical cleaning (descaling) using inhibited acid solutions is required. Never use mechanical scraping on thin-walled tubes.

Problem 2: Corrosion

What It Is

Corrosion is the electrochemical degradation of metal surfaces in contact with cooling tower water. The tower's constant aeration (air mixing with water) dramatically accelerates corrosion compared to closed-loop systems. Common forms include: galvanic corrosion (dissimilar metals), pitting corrosion (localized attack on stainless steel), and under-deposit corrosion (occurring beneath scale or biofilm layers).

How to Identify

Visual signs include rust-colored water, pitted or grooved metal surfaces, loose scale that flakes off easily, and metal surface losses on tower basin floors. Metallurgical analysis of corrosion coupons (test metal specimens suspended in the tower) provides the most accurate corrosion rate measurement.

How to Prevent and Treat

  • Add corrosion inhibitors: Molybdate-based inhibitors (sodium molybdate) provide excellent protection for steel and mixed-metal systems. For closed-loop sections, nitrite-based inhibitors are effective. For galvanized steel, phosphate-based inhibitors are commonly used.
  • Control dissolved oxygen: While aeration is unavoidable in a cooling tower, minimizing unnecessary air entrainment (e.g., by adjusting fan speed, repairing broken drift eliminators) reduces oxygen availability for corrosion reactions.
  • Maintain pH above 7.0: Acidic conditions (pH < 7.0) accelerate steel corrosion. Automatic acid dosing or alkaline chemical programs keep pH stable.
  • Use corrosion coupons: Place standardized steel, copper, and stainless-steel test coupons in the tower water flow to measure actual corrosion rates in mils per year (mpy). Target rates: carbon steel < 5 mpy, copper alloys < 1 mpy, stainless steel < 1 mpy.

Problem 3: Microbiological Growth and Legionella

The Legionella Risk

Legionella pneumophila is a bacterium that occurs naturally in freshwater environments. In cooling towers, the warm (20-45°C), aerated, nutrient-rich water conditions are ideal for Legionella proliferation. When contaminated water droplets are released into the air and inhaled — particularly by workers near the tower — it can cause Legionnaires' disease, a severe form of pneumonia. Outbreaks linked to cooling towers have resulted in fatalities, large-scale evacuations, and significant legal liability for facility owners.

In many countries, Legionella control in cooling towers is a legal requirement under occupational health and safety regulations. Facility managers have a duty of care to implement documented control measures.

How to Identify

Legionella is invisible — you cannot detect it by sight or smell. The only reliable detection is laboratory testing. Recommended practice: test cooling tower water for Legionella at least quarterly, and immediately after any system shutdown/restart, after unusually warm weather, or if operators report flu-like symptoms near the facility.

How to Prevent and Treat

  • Biocide dosing — oxidizing biocides: Chlorine (sodium hypochlorite) or bromine-based oxidizing biocides provide rapid kill of bacteria and algae. Target: maintain 0.2-1.0 mg/L free residual chlorine at all times. Note: high chlorine levels can accelerate corrosion of galvanized steel and some plastics.
  • Biocide dosing — non-oxidizing biocides: For systems where oxidizing biocides are not suitable (e.g., mixed-metal systems with rubber gaskets), use non-oxidizing biocides such as glutaraldehyde, isothiazolinone, or DBNPA on a rotating treatment schedule.
  • Control biofilm: Biofilm (slimy microbial colonies) protects bacteria from biocides and creates under-deposit corrosion. Regular shock chlorination (periodic high-dose chlorine treatment) and biocide rotation prevent biofilm establishment.
  • Temperature control: Keep basin water below 20°C where possible — Legionella proliferates most rapidly between 20-45°C. Use basin water spray bars or basin chillers in warm climates.
  • Regular cleaning: At least annually — more frequently for systems with heavy biofouling — drain, physically clean (high-pressure wash), and refill the tower. Add biocide treatment during refilling.

Complete Water Treatment Program: What a Good Program Looks Like

A complete cooling tower water treatment program addresses all three problems simultaneously. Most facilities use a combination of continuous and periodic treatments:

Daily Monitoring Tasks

  • Check and record basin water level (adjust makeup valve as needed)
  • Record circulating water pH (target: 7.5-8.0)
  • Verify biocide pump is operating and chemical levels are adequate
  • Inspect for visible algae, scale, or corrosion signs
  • Check strainer and basin for accumulated debris

Weekly Monitoring Tasks

  • Conduct full water chemistry panel: pH, TDS/conductivity, calcium hardness, chloride, alkalinity
  • Measure free residual chlorine or biocide level
  • Review water loss logs (evaporation + blowdown vs. makeup volume)
  • Check and clean drift eliminator surfaces

Monthly / Quarterly Tasks

  • Full chemical analysis including phosphate, iron, and manganese
  • Legionella testing (minimum quarterly)
  • Corrosion coupon retrieval and analysis
  • Evaluate biocide program effectiveness and adjust dosages
  • Inspect tower structural components for corrosion damage

Annual Tasks

  • Drain, physically clean, and chemically descale the complete system
  • Professional inspection of heat exchange surfaces (tubes, shell)
  • Evaluate and update the water treatment program based on annual performance data
  • Review compliance with local health and safety regulations for Legionella control

Water Treatment Chemicals: Common Products and Their Roles

Chemical Type Function Typical Dosage Notes
Sodium Hypochlorite Oxidizing biocide, algae control Maintain 0.2-1.0 mg/L free Cl2 Most cost-effective oxidizing biocide
ATMP / HEDP (Phosphonates) Scale inhibition 3-10 mg/L as product Threshold inhibition at low concentrations
Polyacrylic Acid Dispersant, scale inhibition 2-5 mg/L Keeps precipitated minerals suspended
Sodium Molybdate Corrosion inhibitor (steel systems) 100-300 mg/L as MoO4 Requires regular monitoring
Glutaraldehyde Non-oxidizing biocide, biofilm control 100-200 mg/L (shock dose) Rotate with oxidizing biocides
Sulfuric Acid pH control for high-alkalinity water As needed to maintain pH Handle with extreme care — corrosive

Water Efficiency: Reducing Cooling Tower Water Consumption

Beyond water treatment, managing water volume directly reduces chemical costs and environmental impact. Practical water efficiency measures include:

  • Increase cycles of concentration (COC): The ratio of circulating water conductivity to makeup water conductivity. Higher COC means less blowdown and less water consumption. Most systems target 5-7 COC. Going from 3 to 6 COC cuts makeup water use by 50%.
  • Sidestream filtration: Continuous filtration of a portion of circulating water removes suspended solids and reduces biofilm, allowing higher COC and less biocide consumption.
  • Stormwater or reclaimed water as makeup: Where regulations permit, using treated rainwater or greywater as tower makeup reduces potable water use. Note: requires additional treatment for Legionella risk management.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: How often should I test for Legionella in my cooling tower?
A: Minimum quarterly, or whenever the tower is restarted after a shutdown, after unusually warm weather, or if associated illness is reported near the facility. Some jurisdictions require more frequent testing — check local health regulations.

Q: My cooling tower keeps forming scale despite chemical treatment. What should I check?
A: Check that the automatic blowdown valve is functioning (conductivity probe may be faulty or scaled). Verify the antiscalant pump is dosing correctly. Most scale problems stem from inadequate blowdown, not insufficient chemical dosing.

Q: Can I use bleach (household sodium hypochlorite) in my cooling tower?
A: Not recommended. Household bleach contains stabilizers (caustic soda) and is diluted to approximately 5-6% active chlorine. Industrial sodium hypochlorite (10-15% active chlorine) is dosed accurately with metering pumps. Use only industrial-grade biocides formulated for cooling tower applications.

Q: How do I know if my corrosion inhibitor is working?
A: Place corrosion coupons (test metal specimens) in the tower water flow. Remove, weigh, and inspect them quarterly. Calculate corrosion rate in mils per year (mpy). Target: carbon steel < 5 mpy, copper alloys < 1 mpy.

Q: What is the difference between oxidizing and non-oxidizing biocides?
A: Oxidizing biocides (chlorine, bromine) kill microorganisms by chemical oxidation — fast-acting but can be consumed by organic matter and may accelerate corrosion. Non-oxidizing biocides (glutaraldehyde, isothiazolinone) kill by cellular disruption — slower acting but more stable in the presence of organics. Best practice uses both on a rotating schedule.

Conclusion

Cooling tower water treatment is not optional — it is essential for maintaining heat transfer efficiency, protecting capital equipment, ensuring worker safety, and meeting regulatory obligations. Scale, corrosion, and Legionella are the three horsemen of cooling tower failure, and each requires a specific prevention strategy.

The good news is that a properly implemented water treatment program costs a fraction of the downtime, repair bills, and liability exposure it prevents. Start with the basics: install automatic blowdown, maintain biocide residual, test quarterly for Legionella, and keep detailed water chemistry logs.

ZILLION industrial cooling towers are designed for durability and ease of maintenance. Our technical team can advise on water treatment programs suited to your local water chemistry and facility requirements. Contact us for a cooling tower water treatment consultation.

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