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Jan 21, 2026

Gas-phase versus water-phase ozone water: system analysis and design implications

Technical system-level analysis of gas-phase and water-phase ozone water.

Gas-phase versus water-phase ozone water diagrams

Neutral technical analysis of architectural, interface and design implications of gas-phase versus water-phase ozone generation.

Gas-phase versus water-phase ozone water: complete system analysis

Gas-phase versus water-phase ozone water

 

This page provides a deep system-level analysis within the technical ozone water guide. While other pages describe individual generation routes, this analysis focuses on the structural consequences that the choice between gas-phase and water-phase ozone generation has on complete system design.

 

Ozone generation as an architectural core decision

 

The primary architectural decision in an ozone water system is where ozone is generated. In gas-phase systems, ozone is generated outside the water and introduced later. In water-phase systems, ozone is generated directly in or near the water. This decision determines which subsystems are required, where interfaces exist and how system boundaries are defined.

 

Subsystems in gas-phase ozone generation

 

Gas-phase ozone generation requires a chain of interdependent subsystems. Each introduces its own interfaces and coupling points:

  • Air intake and conditioning: supply and preparation of air or oxygen within the system boundary.
  • Electrical discharge module: high-voltage section where ozone is generated as a gas.
  • Gas transport and protection: piping, backflow prevention and off-gas handling.
  • Gas–water contact module: injection or contact section where gas is introduced into water.

 

Subsystems in water-phase ozone generation

 

In water-phase ozone generation, gas-related subsystems are eliminated entirely. The architecture focuses on water and electro-technical components:

  • Electrochemical cell module: location where ozone is generated directly in the water phase.
  • Power supply and control: voltage generation, current regulation and monitoring.
  • Water flow path and hydraulics: controlled flow through or along the cell.
  • Monitoring and signalling: status, fault and maintenance interfaces within the system boundary.

 

Interface analysis by approach

 

The chosen ozone generation route determines the type and number of interfaces. Gas-phase systems require interfaces for air, gas, water and electricity. Water-phase systems are technically limited to water interfaces and electrical connections. This interface reduction directly affects integration and documentation.

 

System boundaries and design separations

 

In gas-phase architectures, system boundaries are often distributed across multiple modules. Water-phase architectures typically define a single compact system boundary. These differences affect installation, maintenance and system description, without making statements about performance or effectiveness.

 

Control architecture and monitoring

 

In gas-phase systems, control logic is distributed across multiple subsystems (discharge, gas flow, water contact). In water-phase systems, control architecture is concentrated around the electrochemical cell and water path. This results in different signal structures and monitoring points.

 

Integration patterns

 

Both approaches can be integrated inline, in recirculation systems or as standalone modules. However, the chosen ozone generation route influences the complexity of these integration patterns and the number of mechanical and electrical coupling points.

 

Relation to other technology pages

 

This system analysis connects the individual technology descriptions. For detailed pages see Corona discharge ozone water and Electrolysis ozone water. The overview is available via Ozone water technology comparison.

 

What is the core difference between gas-phase and water-phase?

The location of ozone generation: outside the water as a gas or directly in the water phase.

Which subsystems are specific to gas-phase systems?

Air handling, gas transport and gas–water contact modules.

Why is water-phase architecture more compact?

No, it is a purely technical system analysis.

How does this page fit within the guide?

It connects generation routes and architectures at system level.
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