ChEMatt
Chemical
- Jun 28, 2005
- 146
I recently purchased a chiller which was to be used in deionized water service. A vendor came to install a temporary DI water supply to the chiller to fill it. The water was 17 Mohm-cm going in, and the water coming from the nozzle inside the receiver in the chiller was also 17 Mohm-cm. However, as soon as the water hit the bottom of the stainless steel receiver (tank), the resistivity immediately drops to 0.1 Mohm-cm. This was confirmed via measurement by two different resistivity meters.
This receiver/tank is made of stainless steel (I assume 304) and has SS pipes coming in and out of it. The welding done on the tank was of very poor quality, it appears, but I have been assured that the welds are "nothing to worry about". There's quite a bit of discoloration around the welds, there appears to be rust despite the piping and tank being made of SS, and there are rust-colored spots on the bottom of the tank that perhaps came from hot sparks during the welding process. I was able to clean up quite a bit of the rust-appearing spots using a Scotch-Brite pad (does not contain detergent).
The tank itself has a lid which may be removed and is not sealed. We're going to put weather stripping around the edge to seal it up a bit better.
My question(s) is: how is the water becoming contaminated so quickly?? There's literally 1.5" in the bottom of the tank and we went from 17 to 0.1 Mohm-cm. I have flushed out the tank several times, circulating the water through the entire system. I hand scrubbed the tank using clean shop paper-towels and 70% isopropyl alcohol to ensure all debris and grease (if there was grease) is removed. The water gets contaminated before it even hits most of the bad-looking welds, as the sensor is very close to the bottom of the tank.
Will contact with air contaminate the water so quickly? Do rust-colored spots on SS (that can't be removed by scrubbing) contaminate the water? Wouldn't the water eventually leach out all the offending minerals by repeated flushing?
I appreciate whatever help you can provide. Thank you!
Onwards,
Matt
This receiver/tank is made of stainless steel (I assume 304) and has SS pipes coming in and out of it. The welding done on the tank was of very poor quality, it appears, but I have been assured that the welds are "nothing to worry about". There's quite a bit of discoloration around the welds, there appears to be rust despite the piping and tank being made of SS, and there are rust-colored spots on the bottom of the tank that perhaps came from hot sparks during the welding process. I was able to clean up quite a bit of the rust-appearing spots using a Scotch-Brite pad (does not contain detergent).
The tank itself has a lid which may be removed and is not sealed. We're going to put weather stripping around the edge to seal it up a bit better.
My question(s) is: how is the water becoming contaminated so quickly?? There's literally 1.5" in the bottom of the tank and we went from 17 to 0.1 Mohm-cm. I have flushed out the tank several times, circulating the water through the entire system. I hand scrubbed the tank using clean shop paper-towels and 70% isopropyl alcohol to ensure all debris and grease (if there was grease) is removed. The water gets contaminated before it even hits most of the bad-looking welds, as the sensor is very close to the bottom of the tank.
Will contact with air contaminate the water so quickly? Do rust-colored spots on SS (that can't be removed by scrubbing) contaminate the water? Wouldn't the water eventually leach out all the offending minerals by repeated flushing?
I appreciate whatever help you can provide. Thank you!
Onwards,
Matt