Pure Water Window Cleaning Technology
Pure water window cleaning technology uses highly filtered water — stripped of dissolved minerals and contaminants — to clean glass surfaces without soap, squeegees, or chemical residue. This page covers the science behind the process, the filtration systems that make it possible, the scenarios where pure water methods outperform conventional techniques, and the conditions under which operators should choose a different approach. Understanding this technology is essential for selecting appropriate window cleaning methods and evaluating service providers operating modern equipment.
Definition and scope
Pure water window cleaning refers to any system that delivers water with a total dissolved solids (TDS) reading at or near 0 parts per million (ppm) to a glass surface, typically through a water-fed pole fitted with a brush head. At that purity level, water becomes chemically aggressive — it actively seeks to absorb contaminants from any surface it contacts, pulling dirt, mineral deposits, and organic material off glass and frames.
Standard tap water in the United States carries TDS readings that vary widely by region. According to the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), tap water commonly contains between 50 and 500 ppm of dissolved solids, with some municipal supplies exceeding that range. When tap water evaporates from a window, those dissolved solids remain as visible spots and streaks. Water purified to 0–10 ppm leaves no residue upon evaporation, which is the functional basis for the spot-free result that defines the method.
The scope of pure water technology extends across residential window cleaning, commercial window cleaning, and lower-floor exterior window cleaning. It is most commonly paired with water-fed pole systems, covered in detail on the water-fed pole window cleaning page.
How it works
The purification process typically involves two or three sequential filtration stages before water reaches the pole:
- Sediment pre-filter — removes particulate matter, sand, and suspended solids that would clog downstream membranes.
- Reverse osmosis (RO) membrane — forces tap water through a semi-permeable membrane at pressure, rejecting dissolved salts, heavy metals, and organic compounds. A standard RO stage reduces TDS by 90–99% (U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Drinking Water Treatment).
- Deionization (DI) resin stage — ion exchange resins capture residual cations and anions, typically polishing the output to 0–5 ppm. This final stage is what brings RO-treated water to the purity level required for spot-free results.
Some operators use DI-only systems when source water TDS is low (below 100 ppm), bypassing the RO stage to reduce resin consumption costs. Others run RO/DI in series for high-TDS municipal supplies, which extends resin lifespan and lowers per-gallon operating cost.
Water is then pumped through hoses running the length of an extendable carbon fiber or fiberglass pole — poles commonly reach 65 feet (approximately 20 meters) — and delivered through a brush head that agitates the glass while the pure water rinses contaminants away. The glass is left wet and allowed to air-dry; no wiping, squeegee work, or chemical neutralization is required.
The quality standard most operators reference is a final output TDS of 10 ppm or below, though 0–5 ppm is considered optimal for preventing any residual spotting.
Common scenarios
Pure water technology is best suited to the following conditions:
- Ground-to-four-story exterior glass — the pole reach of most van-mounted or trolley systems covers building faces up to approximately 65 feet without requiring rope access or scaffolding.
- Routine maintenance cleaning on frames and sills — because the brush head scrubs uPVC, aluminum, and painted frames simultaneously with the glass, frame cleaning is integrated rather than a separate step.
- Facilities requiring chemical-free processes — window cleaning for healthcare facilities and window cleaning for schools frequently mandate detergent-free methods for compliance with indoor air quality or infection-control policies.
- Solar panel cleaning — the chemical-free, spot-free output of pure water systems makes them the preferred method in solar panel cleaning vs window cleaning comparisons, where soap residue reduces photovoltaic efficiency.
- Eco-friendly window cleaning programs — the absence of surfactants or chemical waste aligns with sustainability procurement requirements at LEED-certified buildings.
Pure water is not effective as a first-pass treatment for hard water stain removal on windows, where mineral deposits have bonded to the glass surface through etching. Those conditions require abrasive or acid-based restoration processes before pure water maintenance can be applied.
Decision boundaries
Pure water vs. traditional squeegee and detergent:
| Factor | Pure Water | Traditional Squeegee |
|---|---|---|
| Chemical use | None | Surfactant required |
| Residue risk | None at ≤10 ppm TDS | Streak risk if technique varies |
| Reach above ground | Up to ~65 ft with pole | Typically limited to arm reach |
| Interior application | Not standard | Primary method |
| First-clean on neglected glass | May require pre-treatment | Can address heavier soil loads |
Pure water systems are not suited to interior window cleaning, where surfaces cannot be left wet to air-dry and where pole delivery is impractical in furnished spaces. Interior glass continues to require squeegee technique with appropriate solutions covered under window cleaning solutions and chemicals.
For high-rise window cleaning above four to six stories, pure water pole systems reach their mechanical limit. Those applications require rope access window cleaning or building maintenance unit (BMU) platforms, sometimes incorporating pure water delivery through the drop line, but the access method changes entirely.
Operators assessing whether pure water is appropriate for a given project should consult the window cleaning equipment overview and confirm that source water TDS and available pole height match the building's glass profile.
References
- U.S. Geological Survey — Dissolved Solids in Water
- U.S. Environmental Protection Agency — Drinking Water Treatment Technologies
- U.S. EPA — Reverse Osmosis and Nanofiltration (Technical Fact Sheet)
- International Window Cleaning Association (IWCA)
- USGS Water Science School — Water Hardness