Are you putting ammonium hydroxide in water for corrosion control purposes? If so, you can have entrained hydrogen and nitrogen in the water which requires an elevated system pressure,pg, to keep the gases in solution in addition to the water vapor pressure,pv. Entrained gases can choke a centrifugal pump operating in a controlled coolant chemistry system and water cavitation can damage the pump and downstream components of the system. Vapor pressure increases exponentially with water temperature but combined partial pressures of hydrogen and nitrogen gases in water peak around 250F. The minimum pumped fluid pressure at any operating temperature should conservatively be the sum of vapor and gas partial pressures added to the required Net Positive Suction Head (NPSHR) for the pump. You need to know the total concentration of dissolved gases and their proportions along with Henry's Law coefficients for hydrogen and nitrogen to calculate pressures needed to keep dissolved gases in solution. I have Henry's Law coefficients for temperatures to 600F and calculated gas partial pressures for 75-25 and 40-60% compositions of hydrogen-nitrogen if needed.