Tipo Heat Exchangers Manufacturers, Cooling Towers Manufacturers, and Industrial Chillers Manufacturers

Dry Cooling Tower Manufacturer in Jordan

What is meant by Indirect Dry Cooling Tower?

An Indirect Dry Cooling Tower is a system that uses two separate fluid loops to reject heat. The process fluid is first cooled by water in a conventional heat exchanger, and then that water is itself cooled by air in a dry cooling tower. The key concept is the word “indirect”—the primary hot fluid (e.g., turbine exhaust steam) never goes to the cooling tower itself. It is isolated from the tower by an intermediate heat exchanger


How It Works: The Two-Loop System

This system decouples the process cooling from the heat rejection to the atmosphere. Here’s a step-by-step breakdown, using a power plant as the example:

Loop 1: Steam Condensation Loop (The “Indirect” Part)

  1. Steam Inlet: Exhaust steam from the turbine flows into a traditional surface condenser (a shell-and-tube heat exchanger), just like in a plant with a wet cooling tower.
  2. Heat Transfer: Inside this condenser, the steam transfers its heat to a separate, closed loop of cool water. This causes the steam to condense back into water (condensate).
  3. Return to Boiler: The condensate is pumped directly back to the boiler to be reused. This loop is now complete.

At this point, the primary cycle is finished. The heat from the steam has been transferred to the water in the second loop.

Loop 2: Cooling Water Loop (The “Dry Cooling” Part)