THE PROTECTION AND PROFITABILITY OF PURER STEAM
Combi ovens and steamers provide restaurants and other food service operations with versatile, efficient, predictable results at the push of a button. But have you ever considered the full benefit of water quality on your steam equipment? In order to find the right water treatment system for your business, it’s important to understand how steam equipment and water quality relate to each other, and how they impact the success and profitability of your operation.
Equipment Performance
Scale buildup from unfiltered water can damage steam equipment and can have a significant effect on efficiency: just an eighth of an inch of scale can increase steamer energy usage by 25%.* Properly treated water reduces scale buildup and helps reduce corrosion. This means less time and less money spent on service interruptions, inefficiencies, and repairs.
*Source: Scale Deposits and Efficiency Loss – Johnston Boiler, 2020
Warranty Compliance
Water composition and the physics involved with different methods of generating steam can be complex. So much so that many equipment manufacturers have stringent water quality standards that must be adhered to under their warranty agreements. Water treatment systems protect an operation’s bottom line by ensuring warranty compliance for expensive equipment.
Need help finding the right water treatment system for your business?
Interested in special pricing?
WATER TESTING AND WHAT IT REVEALS
Water’s characteristics and its common contaminants
Steam is 100% water, but water itself isn’t just H2O. Water is a natural solvent, carrying away particles of whatever it encounters along its way to the tap. It’s these particulates, chemicals, and contaminants that can positively or negatively impact food quality and equipment performance.
Total Dissolved Solids (TDS) A combined measure of all organic and inorganic substances dissolved in the water, including minerals, salts, metals, and other particulates.
Particulates Fine sediment, rust, and other particles that provide a catalyst for scale buildup and wear on equipment.
Hard Minerals Evaporation causes dissolved calcium and magnesium ions to build up as limescale in boilers and steam generators. This rock-like scale acts as an insulating layer, preventing the efficient transfer of heat. It increases maintenance frequency and can reduce equipment life by years.
Chlorine While added chlorine makes water safe to drink, it also contributes to corrosion in steam equipment and can impart an offensive taste and odor which can affect food quality.
Silica Even small amounts of silica can form a very hard mineral scale that is difficult to remove. Unlike calcium and magnesium ions, silica cannot be removed through ion exchange.
Iron In addition to giving the water an unpleasant metallic taste, iron in the water that’s made into steam is a recipe for corrosion.
Chlorides Even at low levels, chloride ions can penetrate the passive film on stainless steel and trigger corrosion in steam equipment. In steam equipment, corrosion can be rapid, destructive, and expensive, drastically reducing equipment life.
Alkalinity Alkalinity is water’s capacity to neutralize acid. High alkalinity can indicate an increased potential for hard minerals to form scale; low alkalinity can indicate an increased potential for corrosion.
pH Water’s balance of acid and alkaline substances can be an indication of whether it will be scale-forming or corrosive.
The first step in finding the right water treatment solution for your business is conducting a comprehensive on-site water analysis to determine the specific level of particulates, chemicals, and contaminants in their water. A water analysis is a “snapshot” of water characteristics at the time and place the sample was drawn. Although municipal water reports have value by measuring general safety and potability, they commonly combine samples from multiple sources and may not take seasonal changes into account. Therefore, municipal water reports alone may not provide an accurate picture of the water at a specific location.
Some questions to consider:
- How frequently does your equipment require service, and at what cost?
- Are water-related problems covered under the equipment warranty?
- Is scale buildup affecting the efficiency of your water-using equipment?
- How will corrosion impact equipment life and what is the replacement cost?
- How will downtime and service interruption affect business?
FINDING THE RIGHT SOLUTION
Water quality that meets warranty requirements
Without question, the chemical and physical properties of water have a significant impact on steam equipment performance. As such, it’s reasonable for manufacturers to require that water quality standards be met to validate warranties. Optimized water quality can drastically reduce water-related problems and support years of consistent, trouble-free performance from combi ovens and steamers. Most water in North America cannot meet manufacturer standards without treatment.
Although water quality will vary based on what other contaminants are present, and many variables can influence the overall impact water has on a specific application, warranty requirements from major manufacturers of combi ovens and steamers tend to fall within these parameters:†
† These are only general guidelines. For recommendations and requirements specific to your equipment, reference the equipment manual provided by the manufacturer.
Filtration
Different filtration media excel at removing different contaminants, and the finer the filter, the more particulates are removed. Everpure Kleensteam® and Claris Prime filtration systems designed for steam equipment combine carbon filtration and inhibition technology, with Claris systems featuring additional saltless ion exchange softening.
Inhibiting Technology
Inhibiting systems suspend dissolved calcium minerals in a solution that inhibits them from forming scale and allows them to be flushed away when the boiler is drained. These systems also provide chlorine reduction and nominal sediment reduction. Inhibiting technology is recommended for boiler steam applications, but not recommended for use with combi ovens.
Reverse Osmosis
The RO process forces water through a semipermeable membrane, separating pure water from any substances dissolved within it. This makes it ideal for food service, but this degree of purity can also promote corrosion and other complications in steam equipment. Blending valves on RO systems can allow you to find the right balance to minimize scale and guard against corrosion. Pentair® Everpure® Conserv® RO systems protect both boiler and flash steam equipment from limescale buildup while giving you up to 50% water savings over other conventional RO systems.
Softening
If you’re concerned about limescale buildup on valuable steam equipment like combi ovens can benefit from a softening system to remove the calcium and magnesium ions. Softening does not lower TDS or remove other types of minerals such as chlorides, sulfates, or silica, but it is strongly recommended for high-efficiency reverse osmosis (RO) systems in order to keep those systems working better and lasting longer and as a pre-treatment for filtration and other RO systems.
SELECTING THE RIGHT SYSTEM
Understanding steam applications and equipment
Once a water quality analysis has been done and the right water treatment technology has been determined, the next step is to determine what system will fit your operation’s usage requirements. You’ll need to consider:
- Type of equipment used
- Size of connection
- Operational capacity/flow rate required
Different methods of making steam can require different types of water treatment, so in order to select the right system, you need to know what steam generation methods you are using in your kitchen.
Boiler Steam Equipment
In boiler steam equipment, a volume of water is contained and heated to generate steam. This includes ovens with boilers, steam generators, and ovens with open reservoirs of water inside the oven cabinet.
Flash Steam Equipment
In flash steam equipment, water is dispensed onto a heated surface and instantly vaporized into steam. Any minerals dissolved in the water are then deposited in the oven. If you are using flash steam equipment, RO filtration systems are recommended for the best performance.
An eighth of an inch of limescale can increase the amount of energy your steamer requires by 25%; a quarter inch increases fuel requirements by almost 40%.*
*Source: Scale Deposits and Efficiency Loss – Johnston Boiler, 2020
DON’T FORGET THE FILTER
Perhaps the most important and most overlooked component when considering a water treatment system is replacing filter cartridges on a routine basis. You’ve taken your water from ordinary to extraordinary—to help them keep it that way, make sure to stick with Pentair® Everpure® Replacement Filter Cartridges.
WHY PENTAIR® EVERPURE® ?
Pentair has set the standard for food service water quality for over 85 years. Today, that standard is the Pentair Everpure line of water filtration and RO systems. Customers across the globe trust Pentair Everpure for:
- Easy, sanitary quick-change filter replacement
- A single-source supplier of food service water treatment systems, with a breadth of products to provide the right-sized solutions for any size operation
- High-efficiency RO systems that provide significant water savings over conventional RO systems
- Compact, configurable RO systems with capacities from 50 to 880 gallons per day, featuring controlled remineralization or blending valves to achieve the right mineral balance
- Comprehensive water testing services to ensure the recommendation of the right system
- Total Water Management helps restaurants and other food service operations take their water from ordinary to extraordinary and keep it that way
Email us at [email protected] for the support and assistance you need to find the right water treatment system for your operation.
Leave a Reply