Management of Cooling Towers
Guidance
The cooling system may consist of a cooling tower,
evaporative condenser or other cooling element,
the recirculating pipework, the heat exchanger,
pumps and ancillary items such as supply tanks
and pre-treatment equipment. All of these items
should be subject to the management and control
system. The ACOP says risks from legionella should
be identified and managed. The following section
on commissioning, operation and maintenance of
cooling towers offers a guidance on some of the
issues which need to be addressed in order to
do this.
Commissioning
Systems should be properly commissioned so that
they operate correctly and within the design parameters.
It is essential that the commissioning process
is carried out in a logical and defined manner.The
responsibilities of the staff carrying out the
commissioning process should be clearly defined
with adequate time and resources allocated to
allow the integrated parts of the installation
to be commissioned correctly.The same precautions
taken to prevent or control the risk of exposure
to legionella during normal operation of cooling
systems also supply to the commissioning process.
When commissioning (or recommissioning) a tower,
the following points should be noted.
If a new system is not to be taken into immediate
service, commissioning should not be carried out
until the system is required for use and should
not be filled until commissioning takes place
(if filled for hydraulic testing, then the system
should drained and not refilled until commissioning
takes place).
If a new system is to be taken into use within
a week, commissioning can be carried out and the
system left charged with treated water which should
include a biocide. This is equally important when
recommissioning existing installations which have
been substantially altered following a major design
or modification.
The results of the commissioning process should
be included as a section in the operation and
maintenance manual.The availability of such baseline
data enables periodic checks to be made to show
that the installation continues to operate as
intended.
Formal arrangements should be made to check that
commissioning has been completed to the standard
specified, e.g. an independent engineer witnesses
the testing and countersigns the relevant documents.
Operation
Cooling systems and towers should be kept in
regular use wherever possible. Where a system
is used intermittently or is required at short
notice, it should be run once a week and, at the
same time, be dosed with water treatment chemicals
and water quality monitored. The whole system
should be run for long enough to thoroughly distribute
treated water. If a system is out of use for a
week or longer (up to a month), in addition to
the above, the water should be treated with biocide
immediately on re-use.
If it is out of use for longer than a month and
there are continued management/ monitoring arrangements
in place, the system should be kept full of treated
water which should be checked (for biocide levels
and water quality) and circulated once a week
(see also paragraph 135). If it is not possible
to ensure regular monitoring and circulation (for
example, if a building falls out of use), the
system should be drained and sealed, with a desiccant
left in the system to reduce the effects of corrosion.
Full recommissioning will be required before the
system can be bought back into re-use. Cooling
systems that do not operate continuously, such
as cooling towers that cycle on and off automatically
or those on regular standby duty, require particular
attention with regard to the biocide programme
to ensure that effective levels of biocide are
maintained at all times.
Operation manuals should be available for each
water system. These manuals should detail, in
easily understood terms, operation and maintenance
procedures which enable plant operators to carry
out their duties safely and effectively.
The manuals should include equipment as fitted
and represent the system as currently in operation,
and include (also as fitted) system drawings and/or
schematics, manufacturers' instructions for operation
and system parameters such as capacities, throughputs
and design temperatures. The total volume of the
entire water circuit, i.e. tower pond, recirculation
pipework and heat exchange equipment, should be
known and recorded.
Specific information on the water treatment programme
in use should be included. Where automatic dosing
equipment is used, there should be a means of
confirming that treatment is being applied. Irrespective
of the dosing method, both the quantity and frequency
of chemical application should be recorded.
Such records should be expanded to:
* include the results of system monitoring; and
show any action required and confirmation that
this has been carried out.
Manuals should include details of:
* normal control parameters;
* limits, with corrective actions, for out-of
specification situations, or where plant operating
conditions or make-up water quality have changed;
and cleaning and disinfection procedures.
Where automatic controls are employed, either
for chemical addition or to allow system bleed-off,
they should be checked over their full operating
ranges. In the specific case of conductivity controlled
bleed-off, regular calibration of the conductivity
cell should be carried out.
Standby equipment, such as towers and recirculating
pumps, should operate on a rota basis e.g. daily
on/off, or otherwise isolated and held dry. If
there are standby cooling towers, specific procedures
will need to be adopted to bring then into operation
safely. When a biocide is added to a water system,
all standby equipment or pipework should be brought
into circulation so that the biocide is distributed
throughout the entire system.
Maintenance
The operations manual should include a detailed
maintenance schedule which lists the various intervals
when the system plant and water should be checked,
inspected, overhauled or cleaned. Provision should
be made for the completion of every tasks to be
recorded by the plant operatives.
Drift eliminators require particular attention
with regard to maintenance so that aerosol release
continues to be controlled. They should be inspected,
cleaned and maintained to ensure that they are
free from biofouling, corrosion, scale and other
deposits and are well seated and undamaged.
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