Pseudomonas in Cooling Towers

Pseudomonas in Cooling Towers

 

  • Pseudomonas species in a cooling tower—especially Pseudomonas aeruginosa—pose significant operational, microbiological, and health-related challenges due to their adaptive biology and resistance traits.
    1. Biofilm Formation
      1. Primary Threat:
        • Pseudomonads excel at producing slimy, adhesive biofilms on heat exchanger surfaces, fill material, and basin walls.
      2. Consequences:
        • Insulation of heat transfer surfaces → reduced thermal efficiency
        • Increased corrosion, particularly microbiologically influenced corrosion (MIC), especially under biofilm where anaerobic zones develop.
        • Reduced biocide penetration, leading to persistent microbial contamination.
      3. Biocide Resistance
        1. Pseudomonas has high intrinsic resistance to many oxidizing and non-oxidizing biocides.
          • Their biofilm matrix protects embedded cells from even aggressive treatments.
          • They can develop adaptive resistance over time, especially if sub-lethal doses are used.
        2. Promotion of Corrosion (MIC)
          1. Metabolically active pseudomonads consume organic and inorganic nutrients and create localized chemical gradients.
          2. This contributes to pitting corrosion on mild steel and stainless steel surfaces beneath biofilm patches.
  • Contribution to Fouling and Debris
    1. Pseudomonas can trap suspended solids within biofilm, accelerating sludge formation.
    2. Fouling increases pump load and causes clogging of strainers and nozzles.
  • Public Health Risk
    1. While not as dangerous as Legionella, aeruginosa is an opportunistic pathogen.
      1. Risk to immunocompromised personnel (e.g., through aerosol inhalation or contact with open wounds near the tower).
      2. Pseudomonas can outcompete and create a microbial environment that supports other pathogens.
  • Source of Odors
    1. In stagnant or under-treated systems, pseudomonads may produce malodorous compounds (like sulfurous or musty smells), often mistaken for general tower issues.
  • Mitigation Strategy
    1. Maintain free chlorine (or HOBr) ≥ 1.0 ppm, ideally slug dose to ≥ 3–5 ppm periodically.
    2. Use a synergistic biocide program: oxidizer + non-oxidizer + biodispersant.
    3. Monitor biofilm, ATP, and dip slide counts.