Pulse Power
When it comes to non-chemical condenser water treatment, how does pulsed power technology stack up against other non-chemical water treatment options?
The primary goals of advanced water treatment in HVAC systems are to prevent mineral scale formation, control biological activity and inhibit corrosion. These problems traditionally have been addressed by means of chemical additives. Difficult to administer, monitor and control, chemical additives are ultimately discharged to the environment, where they can contaminate surface and ground waters, concentrate in water treatment plant residuals and be directly aspirated into the atmosphere and inhaled by people exposed to the mist created by cooling tower drift.
To resolve these and many other problems associated with traditional chemical water treatment, non-chemical treatment technologies have emerged. I can say without hesitation the only non-chemical treatment that outperforms chemical water treatment is pulse power.
One of the strengths of pulse power is its comprehensive ability to deal with all water treatment issues. Many non-chemical products deal with only one issue, therefore requiring other methods for the remaining issues.
Consider these products in two broad categories:
Single technology products, and 2) Hybrid technology products. The hybrid products recognise the disadvantage of treating only one issue and, therefore, make various combinations. The hybrids combine so many technologies to treat the condenser water loop, so I will discuss the single technologies generically. A special case of hybrid is the non-chemical/chemical hybrid, which supplements a single technology non-chemical product with the use of traditional chemical treatment to deal with the issues not addressed by the non-chemical product. Obviously, the chemical portion of this approach does not provide the full benefits of 100% non chemical water treatment, including environmental problems, performance problems and continuing cost.
The reader is familiar with these arguments, and they will not be repeated here, as I covered them in a past issue. As stated, the three water treatment issues that must be addressed in a cooling system are preventing mineral scale, controlling biological growth and achieving corrosion resistance. Pulse power technology handles all three, but there are a couple of special cases where chemicals could be beneficially used with pulse power technology, and this is discussed at the end of this article.
Within the single technology products, we will further classify into the following categories:
Magnets in cooling tower applications:
Under some conditions, magnets can prevent mineral scaling. When they work, magnets will generate a few seed crystals. It is the electric field that is generated that does the work, and magnets can generate a weak electric field by fluid passing through the fixed magnetic field. This is called the Lorentz Effect, with the strength of the electric field dependent on the velocity and make-up of the water as well as the positions and strength of the magnet. The electric fields are weaker than those generated by pulse power and dependent on particular conditions of the installation. Magnets have no direct effect on biological growth and are always paired with some biocide.
Electrostatic devices:
These products skip the uncertainty of creating the required electric field with a magnetic field. They create the electric field by the direct means of creating an electric potential difference between two conductive points inside the water flow. The electrostatic devices have only a marginal impact on preventing scale. There is no credible evidence that electrostatic devices have any biological effect. An electric potential difference created this way will generate electric force lines around the anode and cathode points of the system; these lines can impinge on metal surfaces near their installation location and create potentially severe localised corrosion. The water’s conductivity is enough to create a corrosion cell that is analogous to battery with its electrode plates corroding (the battery’s plates represent the metal structures in the cooling system).
Precipitation Induction Devices (PID):
The Pulse Pure Technology is within this family but different. Pulse Pure incorporates two crucial features: 1) High-frequency pulsing, and 2) Proprietary interaction between electric fields. Absent these two features, the alternating current PID has only a marginal impact on preventing scale. There is no credible evidence that PIDs have any biological effect.
Triangular Wave (PID) versus Pulse Power
Triangular Wave Technology (TWT) devices do not have a biological effect and must be combined with copper-silver electrodes (chemical additions) for biological control. TWT probably does have some anti-scaling effect, but the Dolphin System is superior to TWT in that area, too.
CAVITATION DEVICES
Apparently, cavitation (the implosion of micro-bubbles in the water) has a similar effect to that of an electric field at removing the surface charge on suspended particles. As such, it should be effective at preventing mineral scale. Cavitation is an expensive effect to produce, and it has some problematic side-effects.
CHEMICAL ADDITIONS IN NON-TRADITIONAL FORMS
Ozone: Ozone is a very effective oxidising biocide that has had 40 years to establish a market in cooling towers with little success. It is distinguished from other biocides in that it is added in gaseous form rather than as a liquid, and it is more environmentally benign than other biocides. There is no credible evidence that ozone has any scale-prevention effect. The side effects, corrosion problems, complexity, safety and cost of ozone have blocked ozone’s market acceptance in cooling towers.
Ozone for cooling towers
Ozone is a chemical that is usually produced by passing an electric current through dry gas containing oxygen. The chemical formula for ozone is O3, compared to oxygen gas, which is O2 . Ozone in the upper atmosphere blocks UV light and is environmentally beneficial; however, ozone at ground level is the primary contributor to smog and air pollution. Ozone is a very strong and indiscriminate oxidiser and, when it breaks down, forms oxygen gas. Ozone reacts with other minerals to form disinfection by-products, which have unknown environmental effects.
BACTERIAL CONTROL
Pulse power has two methods of controlling microbial populations in cooling systems: encapsulation and electroporation.
A biofilm consists of a slimy bacterial secretion that forms a protective canopy to protect the bacteria beneath it from chemical biocides. It is very slimy to the touch, four times more insulating to heat transfer than mineral scale and is the primary cause of microbial influenced corrosion. The bacteria that live in a biofilm adhering to an equipment surface are called sessile bacteria and represent 99% of the total bacteria in a system.
The system eliminates the slime layer through the process of nutrient limitation. All the living organisms in a cooling tower depend on each other for their food supply. Thus, when the nutrients from the planktonic bacteria are diluted by encapsulation and electroporation, the biofilm cannot be sustained and will not be created; or, it will disintegrate it if one already exists prior to system installation or operation.
CORROSION CONTROL
The most serious corrosion concerns in a cooling tower or boiler come from chemical additives. Removing chemicals, avoiding the use of softened water and using the chemical-free pulse power system eliminates those concerns. Other serious concerns come from localised corrosive attack caused by biofilm or mineral scale. Under pulse power system treatment, these conditions are absent, and therefore these types of corrosion are eliminated…

- Electric devices
- Cavitation
- Chemical addition in non-traditional forms
- Others


- Ozone has a very short half-life in cooling towers, quickly venting to the air. It is difficult to maintain the proper level in the tower.
- Ozone is for biological control only. Scale and corrosion controls are still needed.
- Ozone is a gas and must be dissolved in cooling tower water before it can be effective. Mixing the gas into the water can be a problem.
- Ozone is an indiscriminate oxidiser and can cause severe corrosion problems if the levels become too high.
- Ozone is a hazardous gas that can collect to dangerous concentrations. This is particularly true if there is an indoor sump, where the ozone may off-gas.
- Ozone is an environmental pollutant. OSHA has developed PEL (Permitted Exposure Limit) for work environments that could contain ozone.
- Ozone is usually generated by arcing across a dry gas. As such, the equipment needs regular maintenance.
- Cu/Ag electrodes are often hyped as a “non-chemical” treatment technique. Of course, they really are a chemical treatment, just with an unusual addition method.
- Most copper systems aim to run at greater than 0.6 ppm dissolved copper. As the pH of the tower water system goes high, the solubility of copper goes lower. At a ph of 7.7, the solubility is about 1 ppm. At a pH of 8.1, the solubility drops to 0.1 ppm, and at a pH of 8.6, the solubility drops to 0.01 ppm. A similar effect occurs with silver.
- Silver can be deactivated in systems that contain zinc.
- This treatment can cause localised corrosion on steel due to copper deposition. As the pH varies due to normal tower variations – blowdown, gas scrubbing, make-up water fluctuations, etc. – the copper will precipitate out of solution on steel. This sets up a localised corrosion cell on the steel adjacent to the copper deposit.
- It is impossible to distinguish between silver and copper in the water using test. kits. This makes accurate monitoring of silver levels impossible.
- The EPA considers copper and silver as pollutants. Copper is listed as a priority Pollutant.
- Some bacteria are immune to high dosages of heavy metals. After an initial kill, only those bacteria that are resistant to heavy metals thrive, but they can easily repopulate the system.
- The electrodes need to be replaced periodically as they will lose their effectiveness. Scaling and other deposits on the electrodes affect their ability to release chemicals.
- Environmental benefits
- Energy savings payback
- The Signal Generator, which houses the power and control components in a NEMA 3R- and IEC IP24-rated enclosure. Any serviceable items – fuses, fan filters -- are located in the enclosure.
- The treatment module, which is connected to the Signal Generator via an umbilical cable. There are no customer serviceable parts in the Treatment Module.

- Encapsulation
- Electroporation

- Localised corrosion
- Uniform corrosion
- Exposure of the basin to direct sunlight.
- Limited water circulation in areas of the basin (e.g., an outside trough on cross-flow towers).
- Settled dirt and precipitates.
- Intermittent circulation of the water through the system.
- Areas of intermittent wetting (splash areas).
- Block exposure of sunlight to the algae[1]prone regions. Care must be taken to prevent interference of airflow and to ensure thermal performance of the tower. When feasible, this procedure is the best solution.
- Improve the water flow in quiescent areas of the tower.
- For intermittently operated systems, circulate the water periodically without a load through the Dolphin unit.
- The use of filtration systems to relieve the system of blown-in and precipitated solids can reduce the area for algae to thrive. Effective filtration will not remove existing algae but should prevent future blooms.
- Slug-fed chemical algaecide does not interfere with pulse power system water treatment; therefore, algaecide addition is permitted. However, algaecide treatment may be only marginally effective in areas where climate and blow-in make the tower particularly prone to algal blooms.
- If there is no slime, if the heterotrophic plate counts are in control, and if the algae are not interfering with tower performance, ignore the algae until they are removed by routine periodic tower cleaning.
- pH
- Conductivity
- Total Bacteria Count