What Is LMTD? Log Mean Temperature Difference Explained for Heat Exchangers

Introduction

LMTD (Log Mean Temperature Difference) is a key concept used in heat exchanger design. It represents the effective temperature difference driving heat transfer between two fluids.

What Is LMTD

LMTD is the logarithmic average of temperature differences between hot and cold fluids at the inlet and outlet of a heat exchanger.

It accounts for the fact that temperature difference changes along the length of the exchanger.

Why LMTD Is Important

Temperature difference is not constant in heat exchangers. LMTD provides a more accurate value than a simple average, ensuring correct heat transfer calculations.

LMTD Formula

The LMTD is calculated using:

ΔT = (ΔT1 − ΔT2) / ln(ΔT1 / ΔT2)

Where:

  • ΔT1 = temperature difference at one end
  • ΔT2 = temperature difference at the other end

How to Determine ΔT1 and ΔT2

Parallel Flow

Both fluids enter from the same side:

  • ΔT1 = Th,in − Tc,in
  • ΔT2 = Th,out − Tc,out

Counter Flow

Fluids flow in opposite directions:

  • ΔT1 = Th,in − Tc,out
  • ΔT2 = Th,out − Tc,in

Counterflow generally results in higher efficiency.

Example Calculation

Given:

  • Hot fluid: 120°C → 80°C
  • Cold fluid: 40°C → 70°C

Counterflow case:

  • ΔT1 = 120 − 70 = 50°C
  • ΔT2 = 80 − 40 = 40°C

LMTD:

ΔT = (50 − 40) / ln(50 / 40) ≈ 44.7°C

Use in Heat Exchanger Design

LMTD is used in the equation:

Q = U × A × ΔT

This allows calculation of required heat transfer area.

Correction Factor (F)

In real heat exchangers, correction factor (F) is applied:

Q = U × A × F × LMTD

F depends on flow arrangement and exchanger type.

Common Mistakes

  • Using arithmetic average instead of LMTD
  • Incorrect temperature differences
  • Ignoring correction factor

Conclusion

LMTD is essential for accurate heat exchanger design. It provides the true driving force for heat transfer and ensures proper sizing and performance.

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