Subcooling (ΔTsc)

Subcooling is a way to describe how far a liquid refrigerant is below its saturation temperature at the same pressure. It’s commonly used to interpret condenser outlet and liquid line conditions in refrigeration, HVAC, and heat pump systems.

Definition (at the same pressure)

Subcooling is defined relative to the saturation temperature at the measured pressure:

ΔTsc = Tsat(P) − Tliquid

If the liquid temperature is below the saturation temperature at that pressure, the liquid is “subcooled” by ΔTsc. If the liquid is at saturation, ΔTsc is near zero. (This page is educational — always follow OEM and local code requirements for field work.)

Why subcooling is useful (conceptually)

How to calculate subcooling (safe workflow)

  1. Measure the liquid line pressure at (or near) the location that matches your procedure.
  2. Measure the liquid line temperature at the same location (good sensor contact and insulation matter).
  3. Compute Tsat(P) for the same refrigerant using the measured pressure.
  4. Compute ΔTsc = Tsat(P) − Tliquid.

Avoid generic “target subcooling” numbers from random sources. Targets and procedures depend on equipment design (TXV/EEV, receiver, subcooler, controls), operating conditions, and manufacturer guidance.

Blends: bubble vs dew (important)

For refrigerant blends, saturation can span a temperature range (temperature glide). A common convention is:

  • Subcooling references the bubble point (liquid-side saturation endpoint).
  • Superheat references the dew point (vapor-side saturation endpoint).

Not all charts/tools/procedures use the same convention. Always confirm the procedure you are following (and the refrigerant type).

Common pitfalls (why calculations look “wrong”)

Using FluidTool

You can use FluidTool to compute Tsat(P) for a refrigerant and build intuition for how quickly saturation temperature moves with pressure. For blends, compare endpoints using a two-phase input (P + Q at Q=0 and Q=1).

Related concepts