But Unit Seven was greedy. Its evaporation left behind a concentrate of salts and treatment chemicals—the “blowdown.” And the Combine was secretly piping that blowdown into the Blue Heron at night.
Pete sighed. “The production VP wants 15% more cycles of concentration. If we don’t increase the salinity limit in the basin, the tower scales up, and we lose vacuum on the turbine. No vacuum, no power. No power, the town freezes.”
A month later, Anya stood on the same catwalk. Unit Seven’s plume was thinner now, less a ghost and more a wisp. Below, a new skid of gleaming stainless steel pipes and white RO membranes hummed softly. A truck was pulling away, loaded with drywall-grade gypsum. cooling towers principles and practice pdf
The Blue Heron’s test results were coming back clean. Smallmouth bass had been spotted near the old bridge.
The Meridian Combine’s new “hyper-efficient” cooling tower, Unit Seven, was a marvel of the principles she championed. It used counter-flow design, high-density PVC fill, and drift eliminators so precise they could catch a mist of angels’ breath. But the river beside it, the once-teeming Blue Heron, was dying. But Unit Seven was greedy
Anya finally turned. “That’s where you’re wrong. The practice you’re using is outdated.” She opened her PDF to Chapter 14: ‘Side-Stream Filtration and Softening.’ “You don’t dump the blowdown. You treat it. You precipitate the calcium out as gypsum. You sell it to the drywall plant. You run the remaining water through a reverse osmosis skid. You send clean water back to the tower. Zero liquid discharge.”
“You shouldn’t be here, Dr. Sharma,” Pete said. “The production VP wants 15% more cycles of concentration
“That costs millions,” Pete scoffed.