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Zero bleed for cooling towers, also called zero blow-down for cooling towers, is a process for significantly reducing the need for bleeding water with residual solids from the system by enabling the water to hold more solids in solution. [43] [44] [45]
Here the chill is “transferred” to another closed loop, consisting of smaller pipes that supply the towers of the city's financial district. Built at a cost of C$230m ($200m) over four years, the system is run by the Enwave Energy Corporation. [8] The cooling system is a clean, renewable, and reliable energy source.
This is just a definition. The more common term is blowdown, as stated in the terminology list in the Cooling tower article. --Pakaraki 02:33, 8 January 2012 (UTC) Support. The single sentence and 3 references belong in the main Cooling tower article. Reify-tech 14:57, 1 February 2015 (UTC)
The Deep Lake Water Cooling System or DLWC is a deep water source cooling project in Toronto, Canada. As a renewable energy project, it involves running cold water from Lake Ontario to air-conditioned buildings located in downtown Toronto. The DLWC was built by Enwave, and opened August 17, 2004.
Dolphin WaterCare is a brand of environmentally responsible pulsed-power water treatment technology patented by Clearwater Systems Corporation. [3] [4] The system is designed to control scale, corrosion and biological activity in cooling towers without the use of chemicals, chemical tanks or pumps. [5]
Nine Mile Point 1 draws cooling water from Lake Ontario, and does not have a cooling tower. [ citation needed ] In early May 2011, the plant operator reported that the plant fuel supplier, General Electric, notified the operator that mathematical errors could've resulted in the reactor's fuel getting hotter than expected.