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Open (Wet) vs. Closed-Circuit (Dry) Cooling Towers: Key Differences

FeatureOpen (Wet) Cooling TowerClosed-Circuit (Dry) Cooling Tower
Cooling MethodEvaporative cooling (water exposed to air)Sensible cooling (fluid isolated in a sealed coil)
Water UsageHigh (evaporation + drift + blowdown)Minimal (only in hybrid models with adiabatic spray)
EfficiencyHigh (cools to near wet-bulb temperature)Lower (limited by dry-bulb temperature)
Energy ConsumptionLower (fans + pumps only)Higher (larger fans needed for same capacity)
MaintenanceIntensive (water treatment, scaling, biofouling)Low (no water treatment, less corrosion)
Legionella RiskHigh (open water system)None (fluid is sealed)
FootprintCompactLarger (more surface area needed for air cooling)
Initial CostLowerHigher
Lifespan15–20 years (with maintenance)20–30+ years (less degradation)
ApplicationsPower plants, refineries, large HVACData centres, hospitals, water-sensitive processes

Key Takeaways: Which One to Choose?

Choose an Open (Wet) Cooling Tower If:

  • High cooling efficiency is critical (e.g., power plants).
  • Water availability is not an issue.
  •  Lower upfront cost is a priority.
  •  Space is limited (compact design).

Choose a Closed-Circuit (Dry) Cooling Tower If:

  • Water conservation is required (arid regions, zero-discharge policies).
  • Process fluid must stay clean (e.g., medical, food, or data centre cooling).
  • Low maintenance is preferred (no water treatment, less corrosion).
  • Legionella risk must be eliminated (hospitals, public buildings).

Hybrid Option?

For a balance between water savings and efficiency, consider:

  • Adiabatic-assisted dry coolers (spray water only during peak heat).
  • Hybrid wet/dry towers (switch modes based on weather).

Need help deciding? Ask about:

  • Lifecycle cost comparisons
  • Retrofit options for existing systems

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