Evaporative Cooling helps remove problems of Legionella
27th October 2004
Cooling towers have been well documented as a potential source for legionnaires disease since the virus was first identified in 1976. The Legionella bacteria thrive in any warm, non-sterile water. The danger arises when contaminated water becomes aerosolised to a size between 1 and 5 microns, which the nasal passage filters cannot catch, and it is inhaled into the lowest part of the lungs.
Legionella Bacteria
It has been shown repeatedly that the
Legionella bacteria is present in many
water supplies including potable water,
yet its presence in water is not known
to create a problem. The bacteria must
be transmitted as an aerosol in
sufficient bacterial densities to be
potentially infectious. The minimum
droplet size that the bacteria require for
transmission as an aerosol is 1µm. The
main mechanisms by which aerosols
are created are water streams breaking
or striking a surface, or bubbles
bursting at a water surface. Air
movement can spread these aerosols
hundreds of metres from their source.
The temperature of the water plays
a crucial role: the bacteria develop
between 25 and 46ºC and the optimum
temperature for growth lies between 30
and 37º C. This explains why legionella
is seldom found in cold-water
installations and public waterworks. The
bacteria are killed in temperatures
above 50ºC.
Evaporative Cooling
Evaporative cooling does not cause
legionnaires disease and varies
substantially in operation and design
from cooling
towers and
evaporative
condensers.
In natural
evaporation, hot
air is blown over
water causing an
adiabatic change
of state. The water
is vaporised into a
gaseous state and
the resulting air
has increased levels of relative humidity.
The total energy of the process is the
same but the practical working of this
natural phenomenon is a reduction in
the sensible heat of the air. Thus
through this evaporative process air is
cooled so that it becomes a refreshing
breeze. Breezair Evaporative coolers
contain large filter pads, which are kept
wet by a water distribution system. Hot
air is drawn through the pads by a
powerful fan and is cooled by the
evaporative process. In this way, the air
is cooled without introducing any water
droplets through aerosols, to provide a
constant flow of naturally, cooled, fresh
air, without any air being recirculated.
The water used in evaporative
coolers in usually from potable
supplies in addition to wells, rivers,
lakes and reservoirs. The air supplied to
the cooler may contain a variety of
contaminants including dust, dirt and
bacteria, soluble gases and nutrients.
The water scrubs out
these impurities so they
are not passed into the
building. Only pure
water is evaporated in
the adiabatic process so
these impurities do not
get a chance to be
entrained into the air
stream. As the water in
the evaporative cooler is
at or about the wet bulb
temperature, typical UK
temperatures in the summertime
would mean that the growth of any
bacteria present would be severely
inhibited. Maintained regularly,
drained, cleaned and dried out the
possibility of Legionnaires' disease
originating from evaporative coolers is
removed.
As with all microbiological
organisms, Legionella bacteria
require nutrients and optimum
water quality to proliferate.
Breezair reduces the nutrients
required for the development of
legionella with a cleaning cycle.
This cycle is pre-programmed to
automatically activate on a regular
basis when the system is in use,
draining stale water from the
reservoir and replacing it with fresh
water to maintain optimum water
quality. In addition, when the
evaporative cooler is not in use the
drain valve automatically empties
the water reservoir, leaving it
completely dry.
Equipment Maintenance
There have never been any
cases of Legionnaires' disease
attributed to evaporative coolers,
there can be no room however for
complacency. With the much
greater longevity of the latest
generation of evaporative coolers
plus the year-round use of
evaporative cooling for industrial
and commercial applications,
preventative measures must be
addressed.
The following simple
maintenance procedures will
improve cooler performance,
prevent musty odours and prolong
the life of the equipment.
- Establish a balance between the
amount of water bled off or
dumped to drain and that
replaced by fresh mains supply.
- A regular autumn service to
clean and drain the sump prior
to the winter shut down, and a
corresponding service in the
spring is necessary. However
some units like the Breezair have
automatic drain facility, but
others require the sump to be
emptied and allowed to drain for
24-hours.
- When the system is shut down
allow the fan to operate long
enough to completely dry the
unit out.
- Maintain system cleanliness and
develop a maintenance checklist.
Correctly installed evaporative
air conditioning systems are
completely safe from the risk of
legionella, economic to fit, cost
effective to run, and in addition to
consuming less energy than
conventional air conditioning
systems enable doors and windows
to be left open. Because a
constant natural flow of 100%
fresh air is drawn into the building
and then expelled, odours, germs
and airborne contaminants are
removed and not recirculated
around the building.
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