Cooling Tower Technology
From Whaley Products, Incorporated

A cooling tower is a heat rejection device, which extracts waste heat
to the atmosphere though the cooling of a water stream to a lower
temperature. The type of heat rejection in a cooling tower is termed
"evaporative" in that it allows a small portion of the water
being cooled to evaporate into a moving air stream to provide
significant cooling to the rest of that water stream. The heat from
the water stream transferred to the air stream raises the air's
temperature and its relative humidity to 100%, and this air is
discharged to the atmosphere. Evaporative heat rejection devices such
as cooling towers are commonly used to provide significantly lower
water temperatures than achievable with "air cooled" or
"dry" heat rejection devices, like the radiator in a car,
thereby achieving more cost-effective and energy efficient operation
of systems in need of cooling. Think of the times you've seen
something hot be rapidly cooled by putting water on it, which
evaporates, cooling rapidly, such as an overheated car radiator. The
cooling potential of a wet surface is much better than a dry one.
Common applications for cooling towers are providing cooled water for
air-conditioning, manufacturing and electric power generation. The
smallest cooling towers are designed to handle water streams of only a
few gallons of water per minute supplied in small pipes like those
might see in a residence, while the largest cool hundreds of thousands
of gallons per minute supplied in pipes as much as 15 feet (about 5
meters) in diameter on a large power plant.
The generic term "cooling tower" is used to describe both
direct (open circuit) and indirect (closed circuit) heat rejection
equipment. While most think of a "cooling tower" as an open
direct contact heat rejection device, the indirect cooling tower,
sometimes referred to as a "closed circuit cooling tower" is
nonetheless also a cooling tower.
A direct, or open circuit cooling tower is an enclosed structure with
internal means to distribute the warm water fed to it over a
labyrinth-like packing or "fill." The fill provides a vastly
expanded air-water interface for heating of the air and evaporation to
take place. The water is cooled as it descends through the fill by
gravity while in direct contact with air that passes over it. The
cooled water is then collected in a cold water basin below the fill
from which it is pumped back through the process to absorb more heat.
The heated and moisture laden air leaving the fill is discharged to
the atmosphere at a point remote enough from the air inlets to prevent
its being drawn back into the cooling tower.
The fill may consist of multiple, mainly vertical, wetted surfaces
upon which a thin film of water spreads (film fill), or several levels
of horizontal splash elements which create a cascade of many small
droplets that have a large combined surface area (splash fill).
An indirect, or closed circuit cooling tower involves no direct
contact of the air and the fluid, usually water or a glycol mixture,
being cooled. Unlike the open cooling tower, the indirect cooling
tower has two separate fluid circuits. One is an external circuit in
which water is recirculated on the outside of the second circuit,
which is tube bundles (closed coils) which are connected to the
process for the hot fluid being cooled and returned in a closed
circuit. Air is drawn through the recirculating water cascading over
the outside of the hot tubes, providing evaporative cooling similar to
an open cooling tower. In operation the heat flows from the internal
fluid circuit, through the tube walls of the coils, to the external
circuit and then by heating of the air and evaporation of some of the
water, to the atmosphere. Operation of the indirect cooling towers is
therefore very similar to the open cooling tower with one exception.
The process fluid being cooled is contained in a "closed"
circuit and is not directly exposed to the atmosphere or the
recirculated external water.
In a counter-flow cooling tower air travels upward through the fill or
tube bundles, opposite to the downward motion of the water. In a
cross-flow cooling tower air moves horizontally through the fill as
the water moves downward.
Cooling towers are also characterized by the means by which air is
moved. Mechanical-draft cooling towers rely on power-driven fans to
draw or force the air through the tower. Natural-draft cooling towers
use the buoyancy of the exhaust air rising in a tall chimney to
provide the draft. A fan-assisted natural-draft cooling tower employs
mechanical draft to augment the buoyancy effect. Many early cooling
towers relied only on prevailing wind to generate the draft of air.
If cooled water is returned from the cooling tower to be reused, some
water must be added to replace, or make-up, the portion of the flow
that evaporates. Because evaporation consists of pure water, the
concentration of dissolved minerals and other solids in circulating
water will tend to increase unless some means of dissolved-solids
control, such as blow-down, is provided. Some water is also lost by
droplets being carried out with the exhaust air (drift), but this is
typically reduced to a very small amount by installing baffle-like
devices, called drift eliminators, to collect the droplets. The
make-up amount must equal the total of the evaporation, blow-down,
drift, and other water losses such as wind blowout and leakage, to
maintain a steady water level.
Some useful terms, commonly used in the cooling tower industry:
Drift - Water droplets that are carried out of the cooling tower with
the exhaust air. Drift droplets have the same concentration of
impurities as the water entering the tower. The drift rate is
typically reduced by employing baffle-like devices, called drift
eliminators, through which the air must travel after leaving the fill
and spray zones of the tower.
Blow-out - Water droplets blown out of the cooling tower by wind,
generally at the air inlet openings. Water may also be lost, in the
absence of wind, through splashing or misting. Devices such as wind
screens, louvers, splash deflectors and water diverters are used to
limit these losses.
Plume - The stream of saturated exhaust air leaving the cooling tower.
The plume is visible when water vapor it contains condenses in contact
with cooler ambient air, like the saturated air in one's breath
fogs on a cold day. Under certain conditions, a cooling tower plume
may present fogging or icing hazards to its surroundings. Note that
the water evaporated in the cooling process is "pure" water,
in contrast to the very small percentage of drift droplets or water
blown out of the air inlets.
Blow-down - The portion of the circulating water flow that is removed
in order to maintain the amount of dissolved solids and other
impurities at an acceptable level.
Leaching - The loss of wood preservative chemicals by the washing
action of the water flowing through a wood structure cooling tower.
Noise - Sound energy emitted by a cooling tower and heard (recorded)
at a given distance and direction. The sound is generated by the
impact of falling water, by the movement of air by fans, the fan
blades moving in the structure, and the motors, gearboxes or drive
belts.

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