Why reclaimed water is not potable water
Reclaimed water reaching the data center fence usually meets non-potable reuse specifications: low TSS, low turbidity, low BOD. That is not the whole story. The dissolved and microbiological load is fundamentally different from potable make-up, and it is the dissolved and microbiological load that drives cooling chemistry.
Parameter | Potable make-up | Typical reclaimed | Impact on cooling system |
TDS | 200–500 mg/L | 600–1,500 mg/L | Higher scaling potential at any given cycle |
Ammonia | <0.5 mg/L | 1–10 mg/L | Copper corrosion; nitrification in the tower basin |
Phosphate | <0.5 mg/L | 2–8 mg/L | Ca-phosphate scale, especially on hot tubes |
Organics (BOD/COD) | Low | Elevated | Biofilm growth, biocide demand |
Silica | Variable | Often elevated | Silica scale, hardest to remediate |
Chloramine residual | Controlled | Variable | Material compatibility, biocide interaction |
Microbiological count | Low | Higher | Legionella, nitrifiers, sulfate-reducers |
The implication is not that reclaimed water cannot be used — it can, and is — but that the cooling chemistry program is a different program. A copy of the potable program with a 20% inhibitor uplift will not survive the first thermal excursion.


