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. Common applications for cooling towers are
providing cooled water for air-conditioning, manufacturing and electric power
generation. The generic term "cooling tower" is used to describe both
direct (open circuit) and indirect (closed circuit) heat rejection equipment. 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 may consist of multiple, mainly vertical, wetted
surfaces upon which a thin film of water spreads. 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. 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. 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).- Blogger Comment
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