Cooling Load Estimation
A rigorous walkthrough of the CLTD/CLF method — from heat transfer fundamentals to equipment sizing
What is cooling load?
When you run an air conditioning system, the equipment removes heat from a space. Cooling load is the rate at which that heat must be removed to maintain a set temperature and humidity. It is measured in watts (W) or BTU/hr.
Two terms are frequently confused:
Heat gain is the instantaneous rate at which heat enters a space from all sources at a given moment. Cooling load is the rate at which the cooling system must actually extract heat — it is always less than or equal to instantaneous heat gain, because building materials absorb heat and release it slowly over time. A concrete wall struck by afternoon sun does not dump all that heat into the room instantly; it releases it over several hours. This lag is the thermal storage effect, and it is why a properly calculated cooling load is lower than a naive sum of all heat gains.
Design conditions
Before calculating anything, fix two sets of boundary conditions:
- Outdoor design conditions: ASHRAE climate data gives the 0.4% or 1% design dry-bulb temperature — the temperature exceeded only 0.4% or 1% of hours in a typical year. For Kathmandu, the design dry-bulb is approximately 32 °C.
- Indoor design conditions: Typically 24 °C dry-bulb at 50% relative humidity for comfort cooling.
The temperature difference driving heat transfer through the envelope is:
Heat transfer mechanisms
Heat enters a building through three simultaneous mechanisms:
Conduction — heat flow through solid material (walls, roof, glass, floor), driven by temperature difference across the material thickness.
Convection — heat transfer through fluid movement; warm room air rises and cooler air falls, continuously redistributing heat from warm surfaces.
Radiation — heat transfer via electromagnetic waves, requiring no medium. Solar radiation passes directly through glass; interior surfaces also exchange radiant heat with each other according to their temperatures.
The HVAC engineer accounts for all three in each component calculation.
Thermal resistance and U-value
Thermal resistance (R-value) measures how strongly a material resists heat flow. Higher R means better insulation.
L = material thickness (m)
k = thermal conductivity of the material (W/m·K)
Typical k values: concrete 1.7 · brick 0.84 · mineral wool 0.04 · glass 1.05 · plasterboard 0.16 · air gap 0.18 W/m·K.
For a multi-layer wall, resistances add in series:
ho = outside film coefficient ≈ 34 W/m²·K (at 24 km/h wind)
The U-value (overall heat transfer coefficient) is the reciprocal of total thermal resistance — it tells you how many watts flow through 1 m² of construction per 1 °C of temperature difference:
Wall build-up: 12 mm plaster (k = 0.72) · 200 mm brick (k = 0.84) · 50 mm mineral wool (k = 0.04) · 12 mm plasterboard (k = 0.16)
The CLTD method
Cooling Load Temperature Difference (CLTD) is an effective temperature difference that already accounts for (i) solar radiation absorbed by the outer surface, (ii) thermal storage in the wall or roof mass, and (iii) the time lag between peak solar exposure and peak heat delivery to the room interior.
Using a raw ΔT for opaque walls would overestimate the load because it ignores that the wall stores heat and releases it hours later. CLTD corrects for this; values come from ASHRAE tables indexed by wall/roof construction group, compass orientation, and hour of day.
1 · Conduction through opaque surfaces (walls and roof)
U = overall heat transfer coefficient (W/m²·K)
A = surface area (m²)
CLTDcorr = corrected cooling load temperature difference (°C)
The CLTD correction adjusts the table value for your actual indoor set point and local mean outdoor temperature:
2 · Conduction through glazing
Glass has negligible thermal mass, so there is no meaningful time lag. A direct temperature difference replaces CLTD:
Typical U-values: single glazing 5.8 · double 2.8 · double low-e 1.6 W/m²·K.
3 · Solar gain through glazing
SC = Shading Coefficient — ratio of your glass solar transmission to that clear reference pane (SC = 1.0 for clear single pane; 0.4–0.7 for coated/tinted glass)
CLF = Cooling Load Factor — accounts for thermal mass absorbing and re-radiating solar gain over time (0 to 1, from ASHRAE tables by zone type and hour)
A south-facing window at 28°N in June has SHGFmax ≈ 300 W/m². External shading or a low-SC film can cut this by 40–60%.
4 · Infiltration
Infiltration is uncontrolled air leakage through gaps, cracks, and construction imperfections. It carries both sensible load (temperature) and latent load (moisture).
The mass flow rate of infiltrating air:
Vroom = room volume (m³)
ρair ≈ 1.2 kg/m³ at sea level; ≈ 1.05 kg/m³ at Kathmandu (1 400 m elevation)
3 600 converts hours to seconds
hfg = latent heat of vaporisation of water ≈ 2 501 kJ/kg
W = humidity ratio (kg water vapour per kg dry air); from psychrometric tables using dry-bulb and wet-bulb temperatures
5 · Ventilation load
Ventilation is controlled fresh air deliberately supplied to dilute indoor pollutants and CO₂. ASHRAE 62.1 gives minimum ventilation rates:
Rp = per-person outdoor air rate: 2.5 L/s/person for offices
Pz = design occupant count
Ra = per-area outdoor air rate: 0.3 L/s/m² for offices
Az = zone floor area (m²)
6 · Internal gains — people
People emit heat through metabolism. The sensible/latent split depends on activity level: harder work means more sweating, raising the latent fraction. Latent heat goes directly into the air with no thermal storage effect, so CLFlatent = 1.0 always.
qs, ql = sensible and latent heat emission per person (W)
CLF = from ASHRAE tables by zone type and hours of occupancy
| Activity | Sensible (W) | Latent (W) | Total (W) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Seated, office | 75 | 55 | 130 |
| Light work, standing | 75 | 85 | 160 |
| Walking | 75 | 105 | 180 |
| Heavy work | 65 | 315 | 380 |
7 · Lighting
All electrical energy consumed by lighting eventually becomes heat in the space (1 W in = 1 W heat out). The relevant factors:
Fspace = space fraction — heat going into the conditioned room vs. the return-air plenum (0.6–0.85 for recessed luminaires; 1.0 for surface-mounted)
CLF = accounts for thermal storage, same concept as for people
8 · Equipment
Fload = fraction of rated power drawn when operating
Typical values: desktop PC + monitor 175 W · laptop 45–65 W · laser printer 400–900 W peak (low average) · commercial refrigerator 200–400 W continuous
Psychrometrics: Sensible Heat Ratio
Sensible Heat Ratio (SHR) is the fraction of total cooling load that is sensible:
SHR governs equipment selection. A cooling coil must handle both sensible and latent loads simultaneously. If SHR is low (humid climate or high occupancy), you need a coil capable of aggressive dehumidification — lower coil surface temperatures and more condensation. A coil selected only for sensible capacity will leave the space humid even if it hits the temperature set point.
Typical SHR ranges: dry climates 0.85–0.95 · humid climates 0.65–0.80 · high-occupancy spaces (gyms, auditoriums) 0.55–0.70.
Total load and equipment sizing
Converting to refrigeration tons:
Add 10–15% to Qtotal before specifying equipment to cover duct heat gain, fan motor heat, and safety margin.
Worked example
Room: 6 m × 5 m × 3 m south-facing office · Kathmandu (design dry-bulb 32 °C, wet-bulb 20 °C, mean outdoor 28 °C) · Indoor set point 24 °C · 10 occupants · 6 m² south-facing double-glazed window · 300 W LED lighting. Wet-bulb temperature and humidity ratios are read from the psychrometric chart.
Establish baseline parameters:
Wall conduction
Roof
Glazing conduction
Solar gain
Infiltration
Ventilation
People
Lighting
Equipment (3 PCs)
| Component | Sensible (W) | Latent (W) |
|---|---|---|
| Wall conduction | 87 | — |
| Roof | 378 | — |
| Glazing conduction | 134 | — |
| Solar gain | 765 | — |
| Infiltration | 105 | 65 |
| Ventilation | 290 | 180 |
| People | 638 | 550 |
| Lighting | 230 | — |
| Equipment | 265 | — |
| Total | 2 892 | 795 |
Method selection
CLTD/CLF is suitable for hand calculations on simple rectangular zones with standard construction. Fast, transparent, and ideal for checking software output.
Radiant Time Series (RTS) is more accurate for complex zones. It separates radiative and convective heat gain fractions and uses 24-hour radiant time factors to convert them to cooling loads. ASHRAE recommends this for detailed design work.
Heat Balance Method (HBM) is the most rigorous approach — it solves energy balances at every surface simultaneously, hour by hour. Software such as HAP, Trace 700, and IDA ICE uses this internally.
Quick reference — key symbols
Δ (delta) — finite difference · ṁ — mass flow rate (kg/s) · ρ (rho) — density (kg/m³) · Σ (sigma) — summation · cp — specific heat at constant pressure · hfg — latent heat of vaporisation · W — humidity ratio (see Psychrometry in HVAC)