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Page Title: Log Mean Temperature Difference Application To Heat Exchangers
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Cooling Towers
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Thermodynamics Heat Transfer and Fluid Flow Volume 2 of 3
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Overall Heat Transfer Coefficient

T2   400-  F   120-  F   280-  F T1   500-  F   310-  F   190-  F Tlm (   T2 T1) ln T2 T1 (280-  F   190-  F) ln 280-  F 190-  F 232-  F Q   m      h m Q   m  cp      T m HEAT EXCHANGERS Heat Transfer HT-02 Page 36 Rev. 0 chimney effect of the warm humid air in the tower or by fans at the bottom (forced draft) or at the top (induced flow) of the tower.  Mechanical draft towers are more economical to construct and smaller in size than natural-convection towers of the same cooling capacity. Log Mean Temperature Difference Application To Heat Exchangers In order to solve certain heat exchanger problems, a log mean temperature difference (LMTD or    T   ) must be evaluated before the heat removal from the heat exchanger is determined.  The lm following example demonstrates such a calculation. Example: A liquid-to-liquid counterflow heat exchanger is used as part of an auxiliary system at a nuclear facility.  The heat exchanger is used to heat a cold fluid from 120-  F to 310-  F. Assuming that the hot fluid enters at 500-  F and leaves at 400-  F, calculate the LMTD for the exchanger. Solution: The  solution  to the heat exchanger problem may be simple enough to be represented by a straight-forward overall balance or may be so detailed as to require integral calculus.  A steam generator, for example, can be analyzed by an overall energy balance from the feedwater inlet to  the  steam  outlet  in  which  the  amount  of  heat  transferred  can  be  expressed  simply  as , where is the mass flow rate of the secondary coolant and    h is the change in enthalpy of the fluid.  The same steam generator can also be analyzed by an energy balance on the primary flow stream with the equation , where , c , and    T are the mass p flow rate, specific heat capacity, and temperature change of the primary coolant.  The heat

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