“Scale, corrosion, sediment controls, and system cleaning are critical and disinfectant residual should be adjusted by an automated system”
“The most common cause of overheating and failure of boiler tubes is the formation of hard scale.”
“Removing biofilm could decrease energy costs by 30%. Do you have the right chemicals for your system?”
“The bane of cooling towers is suspended solids which concentrate in direct proportion to the cycles of concentration.”
Denton is home to a growing industrial and commercial base that includes university campuses and research facilities (unt, twu), technology, light manufacturing, distribution, healthcare, and food and beverage. Each of these sectors depends on reliable water systems — cooling towers, boilers, closed-loop systems, and process water — that perform efficiently and comply with environmental regulations. Without professional water treatment, these systems face accelerated scale buildup, corrosion, microbiological fouling, and premature equipment failure that drives unplanned downtime and capital replacement costs.
The local water supply in Denton is sourced from surface (lewisville lake, ray roberts lake via city of denton utilities), which produces water with moderate-hard (100-180 ppm) hardness levels. This elevated hardness creates significant scaling potential in cooling towers and heat exchange surfaces. Left untreated, calcium and magnesium deposits reduce heat transfer efficiency by as much as 30%, increase energy consumption proportionally, and dramatically shorten equipment life. Facilities operating cooling towers on Denton water without a properly engineered chemical program risk premature tube failures, increased blowdown volumes, and escalating maintenance costs that far exceed the cost of a professional treatment program.
Denton falls under TCEQ Region 4 (Dallas/Fort Worth), which oversees environmental permitting and compliance across the region. Region 4 oversees Denton County. The city’s two major universities operate extensive HVAC and laboratory water systems requiring professional treatment, while growing commercial and manufacturing sectors along I-35W generate new industrial water demand. EnviroTech’s water treatment programs are designed to optimize system performance while ensuring discharge water quality meets all applicable TPDES limits and local pretreatment ordinances.
EnviroTech’s Denton service team delivers the full range of water treatment services to commercial and industrial facilities across Denton County and the surrounding area. Every program is designed by Certified Water Technologists and supported by local service technicians who understand Denton’s specific water chemistry and regulatory landscape.
Our water treatment process starts with understanding your specific facility:
Q: How much does industrial water treatment cost in Denton?
Industrial water treatment costs in Denton typically range from $500 to $5,000 per month depending on system size, water chemistry, and treatment complexity. Facilities with multiple cooling towers or high-hardness source water from surface (lewisville lake, ray roberts lake via city of denton utilities) may fall on the higher end. EnviroTech provides free assessments with transparent pricing before any commitment.
Q: What are the water hardness levels in Denton?
Denton’s water supply from surface (lewisville lake, ray roberts lake via city of denton utilities) typically produces moderate-hard (100-180 ppm) hardness levels, primarily calcium and magnesium carbonates that create scaling potential in cooling towers, boilers, and heat exchangers. The exact hardness varies seasonally based on reservoir conditions. EnviroTech monitors these changes and adjusts treatment programs proactively.
Q: How often should cooling tower water be tested in Denton?
Cooling towers in Denton should be tested weekly for basic parameters (conductivity, pH, biocide residual) and monthly for comprehensive analysis (hardness, alkalinity, silica, iron, bacteria). Texas’s warm climate accelerates biological growth, so more frequent testing is often warranted during the extended warm season. EnviroTech’s service program includes all routine testing.
Q: What industries in Denton need water treatment?
Denton’s key industries — including university campuses and research facilities (unt, twu), technology, light manufacturing, distribution, healthcare, and food and beverage — all generate demand for professional water treatment. Any facility operating a cooling tower, steam boiler, closed-loop HVAC system, or process water system benefits from a managed chemical program. Healthcare, data center, and food processing facilities have especially critical requirements.
Q: Which TCEQ region covers Denton?
Denton is covered by TCEQ Region 4 (Dallas/Fort Worth). Region 4 oversees Denton County. The city’s two major universities operate extensive HVAC and laboratory water systems requiring professional treatment, while growing commercial and manufacturing sectors along I-35W generate new industrial water demand. EnviroTech maintains working relationships with regional TCEQ staff and can assist with permit compliance and regulatory communications for your facility.
EnviroTech provides water treatment services throughout Denton County and surrounding areas. Our Fort Worth service team also serves:
Lewisville · Flower Mound · Little Elm · Corinth · Lake Dallas · Sanger · Frisco · Carrollton · Fort Worth
Whether you need a new program, a second opinion, or emergency support, our Denton-area team is ready.
7620 Flagstone St, Fort Worth, TX 76118, USA
(574) 254-0275
F: 330-425-8202
sales@getchemready.com
