Mike, there are other important facts to consider when choosing a biocide. The choice may need to be dictated by your operating pH. When a cooling tower cycles water and CO2 flashes off -- alkalinity increases. Mineral Hardness increases as well. So it is important to know what pH range the cooling tower will operate. If the operating pH is expected to be over 8.0, Bromine -- or a Bromo-Chloro-DMH product would be a better choice than Chlorine products which lose effectiveness at higher pH.
For example; if your raw water pH is over 7.4, mineral hardness is over 90, and total alkalinity is 70+, and you expect to run 4.0+ cycles of concentration. You can bet your operating pH is going to be 8.4-8.6. Chlorine isn't the most effective choice for a biocide in this range -- it would take a lot more product to work as effectively at this pH than it would at a pH of 7.5.
I believe someone told you that ozone is no good because there would be no residual in the tower. That comment is only partially correct. With the kind of total flow you are talking about, you could circulate enough water through a sidestream ozone application to keep your system sparkling clean. The key is proper flow rate - venturi size, static mixers, etc... If you can flow enough water to circulate the entire system volume through the ozone application at least twice per day, you don't need or want residual ozone in your sump.
Residual biocide is important with slug dosing or periodic feed. You need to keep enough residual to make it to the next feed. If ORP is used to govern an ozone or traditional oxidizing biocide application, you apply only as much ozone/biocide as is required to keep the system clean and limit the system from keeping a residual in your sump, which like any oxidizing biocide - can cause corrosion. Using ORP setpoints to govern biocide feed allows your system to vary application of the biocide to match the biological load present in the system at a given time.
Ozone is an excellent choice for river/stream discharge - as it leaves NO RESIDUAL. Ozone can operate in a wide range of pH. Temperature is more an enemy for ozone than pH. In process systems with extremely high temp loads (much more than typical HVAC), ozone may not be the best choice.
Whatever you choose - the key to success is TIGHT CONTROL. Use a good controller, let it log data, pay attention to trends, and adjust the setpoints as necessary based on seasonal variances.
KBParham