Water Conditioning in Houston, Austin, and San Antonio

Goes Heating Systems of Houston, Austin, and San Antonio is a manufacturers representative of Marlo Water Softener

  • Commercial Water Softeners
  • Deionization Products
  • Reverse Osmosis Systems
  • Skid Mounted Packaged Softeners
  • Pre-Engineered Softeners

If you are a business that depends on water (such as hair salons and restaurants), you know about the importance of a clean water supply. But all businesses should be concerned about having clean water. Too often water contains pollutants and bacteria that can’t be seen.

What do DEIONIZATION PRODUCTS do for WATER CONDITIONING?  Deionized water, also known as demineralized water (DI water, DIW or de-ionized water; can also be spelled deionised water), is water that has had its mineral ions removed, such as cations from sodium, calcium, iron, copper and anions such as chloride and bromide. Deionization is a physical process which uses specially-manufactured ion exchange resins which bind to and filter out the mineral salts from water. Because the majority of water impurities are dissolved salts, deionization produces a high purity water that is generally similar to distilled water, and this process is quick and without scale buildup. However, deionization does not significantly remove uncharged organic molecules, viruses or bacteria, except by incidental trapping in the resin. Specially made strong base anion resins can remove Gram-negative bacteria. Deionization can be done continuously and inexpensively using electrodeionization.

What is REVERSE OSMOSIS in relation to WATER CONDITIONING?  Reverse osmosis is most commonly known for its use in drinking water purification from seawater, removing the salt and other substances from the water molecules. This is the reverse of the normal osmosis process, in which the solvent naturally moves from an area of low solute concentration, through a membrane, to an area of high solute concentration. The movement of a pure solvent to equalize solute concentrations on each side of a membrane generates a pressure and this is the “osmotic pressure.” Applying an external pressure to reverse the natural flow of pure solvent, thus, is reverse osmosis.