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Psychrometrics

Psychrometrics (or psychrometry, from Greek ψυχρόν (psuchron) 'cold', and μέτρον (metron) 'means of measurement';[1][2] also called hygrometry) is the field of engineering concerned with the physical and thermodynamic properties of gas-vapor mixtures.

Common applications edit

Although the principles of psychrometry apply to any physical system consisting of gas-vapor mixtures, the most common system of interest is the mixture of water vapor and air, because of its application in heating, ventilation, and air-conditioning and meteorology. In human terms, our thermal comfort is in large part a consequence of not just the temperature of the surrounding air, but (because we cool ourselves via perspiration) the extent to which that air is saturated with water vapor.

Many substances are hygroscopic, meaning they attract water, usually in proportion to the relative humidity or above a critical relative humidity. Such substances include cotton, paper, cellulose, other wood products, sugar, calcium oxide (burned lime) and many chemicals and fertilizers. Industries that use these materials are concerned with relative humidity control in production and storage of such materials. Relative humidity is often controlled in manufacturing areas where flammable materials are handled, to avoid fires caused by the static electricity discharges that can occur in very dry air.

In industrial drying applications, such as drying paper, manufacturers usually try to achieve an optimum between low relative humidity, which increases the drying rate, and energy usage, which decreases as exhaust relative humidity increases. In many industrial applications it is important to avoid condensation that would ruin product or cause corrosion.

Molds and fungi can be controlled by keeping relative humidity low. Wood destroying fungi generally do not grow at relative humidities below 75%.

Psychrometric properties edit

Dry-bulb temperature (DBT) edit

The dry-bulb temperature is the temperature indicated by a thermometer exposed to the air in a place sheltered from direct solar radiation. The term dry-bulb is customarily added to temperature to distinguish it from wet-bulb and dew point temperature. In meteorology and psychrometrics the word temperature by itself without a prefix usually means dry-bulb temperature. Technically, the temperature registered by the dry-bulb thermometer of a psychrometer. The name implies that the sensing bulb or element is in fact dry. WMO provides a 23-page chapter on the measurement of temperature.[3]

Wet-bulb temperature (WBT) edit

The thermodynamic wet-bulb temperature is a thermodynamic property of a mixture of air and water vapor. The value indicated by a wet-bulb thermometer often provides an adequate approximation of the thermodynamic wet-bulb temperature.

The accuracy of a simple wet-bulb thermometer depends on how fast air passes over the bulb and how well the thermometer is shielded from the radiant temperature of its surroundings. Speeds up to 5,000 ft/min (~60 mph, 25.4 m/s) are best but it may be dangerous to move a thermometer at that speed. Errors up to 15% can occur if the air movement is too slow or if there is too much radiant heat present (from sunlight, for example).

A wet bulb temperature taken with air moving at about 1–2 m/s is referred to as a screen temperature, whereas a temperature taken with air moving about 3.5 m/s or more is referred to as sling temperature.

A psychrometer is a device that includes both a dry-bulb and a wet-bulb thermometer. A sling psychrometer requires manual operation to create the airflow over the bulbs, but a powered psychrometer includes a fan for this function. Knowing both the dry-bulb temperature (DBT) and wet-bulb temperature (WBT), one can determine the relative humidity (RH) from the psychrometric chart appropriate to the air pressure.

Dew point temperature edit

The saturation temperature of the moisture present in the sample of air, it can also be defined as the temperature at which the vapour changes into liquid (condensation). Usually the level at which water vapor changes into liquid marks the base of the cloud in the atmosphere hence called condensation level. So the temperature value that allows this process (condensation) to take place is called the 'dew point temperature'. A simplified definition is the temperature at which the water vapour turns into "dew" (Chamunoda Zambuko 2012).

Humidity edit

Specific Humidity edit

Specific humidity is defined as the mass of water vapor as a proportion of the mass of the moist air sample (including both dry air and the water vapor); it is closely related to humidity ratio and always lower in value.

Absolute humidity edit

The mass of water vapor per unit mass of dry air containing the water vapor. This quantity is also known as the water vapor density.[4]

Relative humidity edit

The ratio of the vapor pressure of moisture in the sample to the saturation vapor pressure at the dry bulb temperature of the sample.

Specific enthalpy edit

Analogous to the specific enthalpy of a pure substance. In psychrometrics, the term quantifies the total energy of both the dry air and water vapour per kilogram of dry air.

Specific volume edit

Analogous to the specific volume of a pure substance. However, in psychrometrics, the term quantifies the total volume of both the dry air and water vapour per unit mass of dry air.

Psychrometric ratio edit

The psychrometric ratio is the ratio of the heat transfer coefficient to the product of mass transfer coefficient and humid heat at a wetted surface. It may be evaluated with the following equation:[5][6]

 
where:
  •   = Psychrometric ratio, dimensionless
  •   = convective heat transfer coefficient, W m−2 K−1
  •   = convective mass transfer coefficient, kg m−2 s−1
  •   = humid heat, J kg−1 K−1

The psychrometric ratio is an important property in the area of psychrometry, as it relates the absolute humidity and saturation humidity to the difference between the dry bulb temperature and the adiabatic saturation temperature.

Mixtures of air and water vapor are the most common systems encountered in psychrometry. The psychrometric ratio of air-water vapor mixtures is approximately unity, which implies that the difference between the adiabatic saturation temperature and wet bulb temperature of air-water vapor mixtures is small. This property of air-water vapor systems simplifies drying and cooling calculations often performed using psychrometric relationships.

Humid heat edit

Humid heat is the constant-pressure specific heat of moist air, per unit mass of the dry air.[7] The Humid Heat is the amount of Heat required to change the temperature of unit mass of a Water Vapor - Air Mixture by 1 °C.

Pressure edit

Many psychrometric properties are dependent on pressure concept:

Psychrometric charts edit

[8]

 
A psychrometric chart for sea-level elevation

Terminology edit

A psychrometric chart is a graph of the thermodynamic parameters of moist air at a constant pressure, often equated to an elevation relative to sea level. The ASHRAE-style psychrometric chart, shown here, was pioneered by Willis Carrier in 1904.[9] It depicts these parameters and is thus a graphical equation of state. The parameters are:

  • Dry-bulb temperature (DBT) is that of an air sample, as determined by an ordinary thermometer. It is typically plotted as the abscissa (horizontal axis) of the graph. The SI units for temperature are kelvins or degrees Celsius; other units are degrees Fahrenheit and degrees Rankine.
  • Wet-bulb temperature (WBT) is that of an air sample after it has passed through a constant-pressure, ideal, adiabatic saturation process, that is, after the air has passed over a large surface of liquid water in an insulated channel. In practice this is the reading of a thermometer whose sensing bulb is covered with a wet sock evaporating into a rapid stream of the sample air (see Hygrometer). When the air sample is pre-saturated with water, the WBT will read the same as the DBT. The slope of lines of constant WBT is the ratio between the heat of vaporization of water and the specific heat of dry air, roughly 0.4.
  • Dew point temperature (DPT) is the temperature at which a moist air sample at the same pressure would reach water vapor "saturation." At this point further removal of heat would result in water vapor condensing into liquid water fog or, if below freezing point, solid hoarfrost. The dew point temperature is measured easily and provides useful information, but is normally not considered an independent property of the air sample as it duplicates information available via other humidity properties and the saturation curve.
  • Relative humidity (RH) is the ratio of the mole fraction of water vapor to the mole fraction of saturated moist air at the same temperature and pressure. RH is dimensionless, and is usually expressed as a percentage. Lines of constant RH reflect the physics of air and water: they are determined via experimental measurement. The concept that air "holds" moisture, or that moisture "dissolves" in dry air and saturates the solution at some proportion, is erroneous (albeit widespread); see relative humidity for further details.
  • Humidity ratio is the proportion of mass of water vapor per unit mass of dry air at the given conditions (DBT, WBT, DPT, RH, etc.). It is also known as the moisture content or mixing ratio. It is typically plotted as the ordinate (vertical axis) of the graph. For a given DBT there will be a particular humidity ratio for which the air sample is at 100% relative humidity: the relationship reflects the physics of water and air and must be determined by measurement. The dimensionless humidity ratio is typically expressed as grams of water per kilogram of dry air, or grains of water per pound of air (7000 grains equal 1 pound).
  • Specific enthalpy, symbolized by h, is the sum of the internal (heat) energy of the moist air in question, including the heat of the air and water vapor within. Also called heat content per unit mass. In the approximation of ideal gases, lines of constant enthalpy are parallel to lines of constant WBT. Enthalpy is given in (SI) joules per kilogram of air, or BTU per pound of dry air.
  • Specific volume is the volume of the mixture (dry air plus the water vapor) containing one unit of mass of "dry air". The SI units are cubic meters per kilogram of dry air; other units are cubic feet per pound of dry air. The inverse of specific volume is usually confused as the density of the mixture.[10] However, to obtain the actual mixture density ( ) one must multiply the inverse of the specific volume by unity plus the humidity ratio value at the point of interest:[11]
 
where:
  •   = Mass of dry air
  •   = Mass of water vapor
  •   = Total volume
  •   = Moist air specific volume, m3 kg−1
  •   = Humidity ratio

The psychrometric chart allows all the parameters of some moist air to be determined from any three independent parameters, one of which must be the pressure. Changes in state, such as when two air streams mix, can be modeled easily and somewhat graphically using the correct psychrometric chart for the location's air pressure or elevation relative to sea level. For locations at not more than 2000 ft (600 m) of altitude it is common practice to use the sea-level psychrometric chart.

In the ω-t chart, the dry bulb temperature (t) appears as the abscissa (horizontal axis) and the humidity ratio (ω) appear as the ordinate (vertical axis). A chart is valid for a given air pressure (or elevation above sea level). From any two independent ones of the six parameters dry bulb temperature, wet bulb temperature, relative humidity, humidity ratio, specific enthalpy, and specific volume, all the others can be determined. There are   possible combinations of independent and derived parameters.

Locating parameters on chart edit

* Dry bulb temperature: These lines are drawn straight, not always parallel to each other, and slightly inclined from the vertical position. This is the t–axis, the abscissa (horizontal) axis. Each line represents a constant temperature.

* Dew point temperature: From the state[clarification needed] point follow the horizontal line of constant humidity ratio to the intercept of 100% RH, also known as the saturation curve. The dew point temperature is equal to the fully saturated dry bulb or wet bulb temperatures.

* Wet bulb temperature: These lines are oblique lines that differ slightly from the enthalpy lines. They are identically straight but are not exactly parallel to each other. These intersect the saturation curve at DBT point.

* Relative humidity: These hyperbolic lines are shown in intervals of 10%. The saturation curve is at 100% RH, while dry air is at 0% RH.

* Humidity ratio: These are the horizontal lines on the chart. Humidity ratio is usually expressed as mass of moisture per mass of dry air (pounds or kilograms of moisture per pound or kilogram of dry air, respectively). The range is from 0 for dry air up to 0.03 (lbmw/lbma) on the right hand ω-axis, the ordinate or vertical axis of the chart.

* Specific enthalpy: These are oblique lines drawn diagonally downward from left to right across the chart that are parallel to each other. These are not parallel to wet bulb temperature lines.

* Specific volume: These are a family of equally spaced straight lines that are nearly parallel.

The region above the saturation curve is a two-phase region that represents a mixture of saturated moist air and liquid water, in thermal equilibrium.

The protractor on the upper left of the chart has two scales. The inner scale represents sensible-total heat ratio (SHF). The outer scale gives the ratio of enthalpy difference to humidity difference. This is used to establish the slope of a condition line between two processes. The horizontal component of the condition line is the change in sensible heat while the vertical component is the change in latent heat.[12][13][14]

How to read the chart: fundamental examples edit

Psychrometric charts [15] are available in SI (metric) and IP (U.S./Imperial) units. They are also available in low and high temperature ranges and for different pressures.

  • Determining relative humidity: The percent relative humidity can be located at the intersection of the vertical dry bulb and diagonally down sloping wet bulb temperature lines. Metric (SI): Using a dry bulb of 25 °C and a wet bulb of 20 °C, read the relative humidity at approximately 63.5%. U.S/Imperial (IP): Using a dry bulb of 77 °F and a wet bulb of 68 °F, read the relative humidity at approximately 63.5%. In this example the humidity ratio is 0.0126 kg water per kg dry air.
  • Determining the effect of temperature change on relative humidity: For air of a fixed water composition or moisture ratio, find the starting relative humidity from the intersection of the wet and dry bulb temperature lines. Using the conditions from the previous example, the relative humidity at a different dry bulb temperatures can be found along the horizontal humidity ratio line of 0.0126, either in kg water per kg dry air or pounds water per pound dry air.
A common variation of this problem is determining the final humidity of air leaving an air conditioner evaporator coil then heated to a higher temperature. Assume that the temperature leaving the coil is 10°C (50°F) and is heated to room temperature (not mixed with room air), which is found by following the horizontal humidity ratio from the dew point or saturation line to the room dry bulb temperature line and reading the relative humidity. In typical practice the conditioned air is mixed with room air that is being infiltrated with outside air.
  • Determining the amount of water to be removed or added in lowering or raising relative humidity: This is the difference in humidity ratio between the initial and final conditions times the weight of dry air.
 
Mollier Diagram (Chart), IP Units

Mollier diagram edit

The "Mollier i-x" (Enthalpy - Humidity Mixing Ratio) diagram, developed by Richard Mollier in 1923,[16] is an alternative psychrometric chart, preferred by many users in Germany, Austria, Switzerland, the Netherlands, Belgium, France, Scandinavia, Eastern Europe, and Russia.[17]

The underlying psychrometric parameter data for the psychrometric chart and the Mollier diagram are identical. At first glance there is little resemblance between the charts, but if the chart is rotated by ninety degrees and looked at in a mirror the resemblance becomes apparent. The Mollier diagram coordinates are enthalpy and humidity ratio. The enthalpy coordinate is skewed and the lines of constant enthalpy are parallel and evenly spaced. The ASHRAE psychrometric charts since 1961 use similar plotting coordinates. Some psychrometric charts use dry-bulb temperature and humidity ratio coordinates.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Henry George Liddell, Robert Scott, "psychron", A Greek-English Lexicon
  2. ^ Henry George Liddell, Robert Scott, "metron", A Greek-English Lexicon
  3. ^ World Meteorological Organisation. (2008) Guide to Meteorological Instruments and Methods Of Observation. WMO-8. Seventh edition. Chapter 2, Measurement of Temperature.
  4. ^ . American Meteorological Society. Archived from the original on 16 October 2012. Retrieved 18 September 2011.
  5. ^ http://www.che.iitb.ac.in/courses/uglab/manuals/coollabmanual.pdf 2011-07-21 at the Wayback Machine, accessed 20080408
  6. ^ http://www.probec.org/fileuploads/fl120336971099294500CHAP12_Dryers.pdf 2011-07-27 at the Wayback Machine, accessed 20080408
  7. ^ . Archived from the original on 2006-10-30. Retrieved 2008-04-10.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  8. ^ Dehumidification in Industrial and Building Applications. 2012.
  9. ^ Gatley, D.P. (2004). "Psychrometric chart celebrates 100th anniversary". ASHRAE Journal. 46 (11): 16–20.
  10. ^ "Module 7: Applying the psychrometric relationships". Retrieved 2021-10-13.
  11. ^ 2001 ASHRAE Handbook - Fundamentals (SI). Scott A. Zeh, Nancy F. Thysell, and Jayne E. Jackson. 2001. p. 6.8.
  12. ^ Kutz, Myer (Ed). (2006) The Mechanical Engineers’ Handbook. New Jersey: John Wiley & Sons.
  13. ^ American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning Engineers (1997). ASHRAE Fundamentals Handbook
  14. ^ Biasca, Karyn. "Psychrometric Chart Tutorial" 2011-01-02 at the Wayback Machine, accessed November 20, 2010.
  15. ^ Hawaii Energy and Environmental Technologies (HEET) Initiative. July 2016.
  16. ^ Mollier, R. 1923. "Ein neues diagram für dampfluftgemische." ZVDI 67(9)
  17. ^ Todorovic, B., ASHRAE Transactions DA-07-024 (113-1), 2007

External links edit

  • Western Cooling Efficiency Center Psych: An Open Source Psychrometric Plug-in for Microsoft Excel by Kevin Brown.
  • Xchanger Inc, webpage Calculator for humidity, dew point, mass flows & heat flux for variable pressure systems with compressors, blowers, vacuum pumps and heat exchangers.
  • Calculator for humidity, dew point.
  • How to read and use a psychrometric chart
  • Free Online Interactive Psychrometric Chart
  • Psychrometric Chart Calculator and Sketcher

psychrometrics, psychrometry, redirects, here, confused, with, psychometry, confused, with, psychometrics, discipline, psychology, education, psychrometry, from, greek, ψυχρόν, psuchron, cold, μέτρον, metron, means, measurement, also, called, hygrometry, field. Psychrometry redirects here Not to be confused with Psychometry Not to be confused with Psychometrics a discipline of psychology and education Psychrometrics or psychrometry from Greek psyxron psuchron cold and metron metron means of measurement 1 2 also called hygrometry is the field of engineering concerned with the physical and thermodynamic properties of gas vapor mixtures Contents 1 Common applications 2 Psychrometric properties 2 1 Dry bulb temperature DBT 2 2 Wet bulb temperature WBT 2 3 Dew point temperature 2 4 Humidity 2 4 1 Specific Humidity 2 4 2 Absolute humidity 2 4 3 Relative humidity 2 5 Specific enthalpy 2 6 Specific volume 2 7 Psychrometric ratio 2 8 Humid heat 2 9 Pressure 3 Psychrometric charts 3 1 Terminology 3 2 Locating parameters on chart 3 3 How to read the chart fundamental examples 3 4 Mollier diagram 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksCommon applications editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Although the principles of psychrometry apply to any physical system consisting of gas vapor mixtures the most common system of interest is the mixture of water vapor and air because of its application in heating ventilation and air conditioning and meteorology In human terms our thermal comfort is in large part a consequence of not just the temperature of the surrounding air but because we cool ourselves via perspiration the extent to which that air is saturated with water vapor Many substances are hygroscopic meaning they attract water usually in proportion to the relative humidity or above a critical relative humidity Such substances include cotton paper cellulose other wood products sugar calcium oxide burned lime and many chemicals and fertilizers Industries that use these materials are concerned with relative humidity control in production and storage of such materials Relative humidity is often controlled in manufacturing areas where flammable materials are handled to avoid fires caused by the static electricity discharges that can occur in very dry air In industrial drying applications such as drying paper manufacturers usually try to achieve an optimum between low relative humidity which increases the drying rate and energy usage which decreases as exhaust relative humidity increases In many industrial applications it is important to avoid condensation that would ruin product or cause corrosion Molds and fungi can be controlled by keeping relative humidity low Wood destroying fungi generally do not grow at relative humidities below 75 Psychrometric properties editDry bulb temperature DBT edit Main article Dry bulb temperature The dry bulb temperature is the temperature indicated by a thermometer exposed to the air in a place sheltered from direct solar radiation The term dry bulb is customarily added to temperature to distinguish it from wet bulb and dew point temperature In meteorology and psychrometrics the word temperature by itself without a prefix usually means dry bulb temperature Technically the temperature registered by the dry bulb thermometer of a psychrometer The name implies that the sensing bulb or element is in fact dry WMO provides a 23 page chapter on the measurement of temperature 3 Wet bulb temperature WBT edit Main article Wet bulb temperature The thermodynamic wet bulb temperature is a thermodynamic property of a mixture of air and water vapor The value indicated by a wet bulb thermometer often provides an adequate approximation of the thermodynamic wet bulb temperature The accuracy of a simple wet bulb thermometer depends on how fast air passes over the bulb and how well the thermometer is shielded from the radiant temperature of its surroundings Speeds up to 5 000 ft min 60 mph 25 4 m s are best but it may be dangerous to move a thermometer at that speed Errors up to 15 can occur if the air movement is too slow or if there is too much radiant heat present from sunlight for example A wet bulb temperature taken with air moving at about 1 2 m s is referred to as a screen temperature whereas a temperature taken with air moving about 3 5 m s or more is referred to as sling temperature A psychrometer is a device that includes both a dry bulb and a wet bulb thermometer A sling psychrometer requires manual operation to create the airflow over the bulbs but a powered psychrometer includes a fan for this function Knowing both the dry bulb temperature DBT and wet bulb temperature WBT one can determine the relative humidity RH from the psychrometric chart appropriate to the air pressure Dew point temperature edit Main article Dew point temperature The saturation temperature of the moisture present in the sample of air it can also be defined as the temperature at which the vapour changes into liquid condensation Usually the level at which water vapor changes into liquid marks the base of the cloud in the atmosphere hence called condensation level So the temperature value that allows this process condensation to take place is called the dew point temperature A simplified definition is the temperature at which the water vapour turns into dew Chamunoda Zambuko 2012 Humidity edit Main article Humidity Specific Humidity edit Specific humidity is defined as the mass of water vapor as a proportion of the mass of the moist air sample including both dry air and the water vapor it is closely related to humidity ratio and always lower in value Absolute humidity edit The mass of water vapor per unit mass of dry air containing the water vapor This quantity is also known as the water vapor density 4 Relative humidity edit The ratio of the vapor pressure of moisture in the sample to the saturation vapor pressure at the dry bulb temperature of the sample Specific enthalpy edit Analogous to the specific enthalpy of a pure substance In psychrometrics the term quantifies the total energy of both the dry air and water vapour per kilogram of dry air Specific volume edit Analogous to the specific volume of a pure substance However in psychrometrics the term quantifies the total volume of both the dry air and water vapour per unit mass of dry air Psychrometric ratio edit The psychrometric ratio is the ratio of the heat transfer coefficient to the product of mass transfer coefficient and humid heat at a wetted surface It may be evaluated with the following equation 5 6 r h c k y c s displaystyle r frac h c k y c s nbsp where r displaystyle r nbsp Psychrometric ratio dimensionless h c displaystyle h c nbsp convective heat transfer coefficient W m 2 K 1 k y displaystyle k y nbsp convective mass transfer coefficient kg m 2 s 1 c s displaystyle c s nbsp humid heat J kg 1 K 1 dd The psychrometric ratio is an important property in the area of psychrometry as it relates the absolute humidity and saturation humidity to the difference between the dry bulb temperature and the adiabatic saturation temperature Mixtures of air and water vapor are the most common systems encountered in psychrometry The psychrometric ratio of air water vapor mixtures is approximately unity which implies that the difference between the adiabatic saturation temperature and wet bulb temperature of air water vapor mixtures is small This property of air water vapor systems simplifies drying and cooling calculations often performed using psychrometric relationships Humid heat edit Humid heat is the constant pressure specific heat of moist air per unit mass of the dry air 7 The Humid Heat is the amount of Heat required to change the temperature of unit mass of a Water Vapor Air Mixture by 1 C Pressure edit Many psychrometric properties are dependent on pressure concept vapor pressure of water atmospheric pressure at the location of the sample Psychrometric charts edit 8 nbsp A psychrometric chart for sea level elevationTerminology edit A psychrometric chart is a graph of the thermodynamic parameters of moist air at a constant pressure often equated to an elevation relative to sea level The ASHRAE style psychrometric chart shown here was pioneered by Willis Carrier in 1904 9 It depicts these parameters and is thus a graphical equation of state The parameters are Dry bulb temperature DBT is that of an air sample as determined by an ordinary thermometer It is typically plotted as the abscissa horizontal axis of the graph The SI units for temperature are kelvins or degrees Celsius other units are degrees Fahrenheit and degrees Rankine Wet bulb temperature WBT is that of an air sample after it has passed through a constant pressure ideal adiabatic saturation process that is after the air has passed over a large surface of liquid water in an insulated channel In practice this is the reading of a thermometer whose sensing bulb is covered with a wet sock evaporating into a rapid stream of the sample air see Hygrometer When the air sample is pre saturated with water the WBT will read the same as the DBT The slope of lines of constant WBT is the ratio between the heat of vaporization of water and the specific heat of dry air roughly 0 4 Dew point temperature DPT is the temperature at which a moist air sample at the same pressure would reach water vapor saturation At this point further removal of heat would result in water vapor condensing into liquid water fog or if below freezing point solid hoarfrost The dew point temperature is measured easily and provides useful information but is normally not considered an independent property of the air sample as it duplicates information available via other humidity properties and the saturation curve Relative humidity RH is the ratio of the mole fraction of water vapor to the mole fraction of saturated moist air at the same temperature and pressure RH is dimensionless and is usually expressed as a percentage Lines of constant RH reflect the physics of air and water they are determined via experimental measurement The concept that air holds moisture or that moisture dissolves in dry air and saturates the solution at some proportion is erroneous albeit widespread see relative humidity for further details Humidity ratio is the proportion of mass of water vapor per unit mass of dry air at the given conditions DBT WBT DPT RH etc It is also known as the moisture content or mixing ratio It is typically plotted as the ordinate vertical axis of the graph For a given DBT there will be a particular humidity ratio for which the air sample is at 100 relative humidity the relationship reflects the physics of water and air and must be determined by measurement The dimensionless humidity ratio is typically expressed as grams of water per kilogram of dry air or grains of water per pound of air 7000 grains equal 1 pound Specific enthalpy symbolized by h is the sum of the internal heat energy of the moist air in question including the heat of the air and water vapor within Also called heat content per unit mass In the approximation of ideal gases lines of constant enthalpy are parallel to lines of constant WBT Enthalpy is given in SI joules per kilogram of air or BTU per pound of dry air Specific volume is the volume of the mixture dry air plus the water vapor containing one unit of mass of dry air The SI units are cubic meters per kilogram of dry air other units are cubic feet per pound of dry air The inverse of specific volume is usually confused as the density of the mixture 10 However to obtain the actual mixture density r displaystyle rho nbsp one must multiply the inverse of the specific volume by unity plus the humidity ratio value at the point of interest 11 r M d a M w V 1 v 1 W displaystyle rho frac M da M w V left frac 1 v right 1 W nbsp where M d a displaystyle M da nbsp Mass of dry air M w displaystyle M w nbsp Mass of water vapor V displaystyle V nbsp Total volume v displaystyle v nbsp Moist air specific volume m3 kg 1 W M w M d a displaystyle W frac M w M da nbsp Humidity ratio dd The psychrometric chart allows all the parameters of some moist air to be determined from any three independent parameters one of which must be the pressure Changes in state such as when two air streams mix can be modeled easily and somewhat graphically using the correct psychrometric chart for the location s air pressure or elevation relative to sea level For locations at not more than 2000 ft 600 m of altitude it is common practice to use the sea level psychrometric chart In the w t chart the dry bulb temperature t appears as the abscissa horizontal axis and the humidity ratio w appear as the ordinate vertical axis A chart is valid for a given air pressure or elevation above sea level From any two independent ones of the six parameters dry bulb temperature wet bulb temperature relative humidity humidity ratio specific enthalpy and specific volume all the others can be determined There are 6 2 15 displaystyle left 6 atop 2 right 15 nbsp possible combinations of independent and derived parameters Locating parameters on chart edit Dry bulb temperature These lines are drawn straight not always parallel to each other and slightly inclined from the vertical position This is the t axis the abscissa horizontal axis Each line represents a constant temperature Dew point temperature From the state clarification needed point follow the horizontal line of constant humidity ratio to the intercept of 100 RH also known as the saturation curve The dew point temperature is equal to the fully saturated dry bulb or wet bulb temperatures Wet bulb temperature These lines are oblique lines that differ slightly from the enthalpy lines They are identically straight but are not exactly parallel to each other These intersect the saturation curve at DBT point Relative humidity These hyperbolic lines are shown in intervals of 10 The saturation curve is at 100 RH while dry air is at 0 RH Humidity ratio These are the horizontal lines on the chart Humidity ratio is usually expressed as mass of moisture per mass of dry air pounds or kilograms of moisture per pound or kilogram of dry air respectively The range is from 0 for dry air up to 0 03 lbmw lbma on the right hand w axis the ordinate or vertical axis of the chart Specific enthalpy These are oblique lines drawn diagonally downward from left to right across the chart that are parallel to each other These are not parallel to wet bulb temperature lines Specific volume These are a family of equally spaced straight lines that are nearly parallel The region above the saturation curve is a two phase region that represents a mixture of saturated moist air and liquid water in thermal equilibrium The protractor on the upper left of the chart has two scales The inner scale represents sensible total heat ratio SHF The outer scale gives the ratio of enthalpy difference to humidity difference This is used to establish the slope of a condition line between two processes The horizontal component of the condition line is the change in sensible heat while the vertical component is the change in latent heat 12 13 14 How to read the chart fundamental examples edit Psychrometric charts 15 are available in SI metric and IP U S Imperial units They are also available in low and high temperature ranges and for different pressures Determining relative humidity The percent relative humidity can be located at the intersection of the vertical dry bulb and diagonally down sloping wet bulb temperature lines Metric SI Using a dry bulb of 25 C and a wet bulb of 20 C read the relative humidity at approximately 63 5 U S Imperial IP Using a dry bulb of 77 F and a wet bulb of 68 F read the relative humidity at approximately 63 5 In this example the humidity ratio is 0 0126 kg water per kg dry air Determining the effect of temperature change on relative humidity For air of a fixed water composition or moisture ratio find the starting relative humidity from the intersection of the wet and dry bulb temperature lines Using the conditions from the previous example the relative humidity at a different dry bulb temperatures can be found along the horizontal humidity ratio line of 0 0126 either in kg water per kg dry air or pounds water per pound dry air A common variation of this problem is determining the final humidity of air leaving an air conditioner evaporator coil then heated to a higher temperature Assume that the temperature leaving the coil is 10 C 50 F and is heated to room temperature not mixed with room air which is found by following the horizontal humidity ratio from the dew point or saturation line to the room dry bulb temperature line and reading the relative humidity In typical practice the conditioned air is mixed with room air that is being infiltrated with outside air Determining the amount of water to be removed or added in lowering or raising relative humidity This is the difference in humidity ratio between the initial and final conditions times the weight of dry air nbsp Mollier Diagram Chart IP UnitsMollier diagram edit The Mollier i x Enthalpy Humidity Mixing Ratio diagram developed by Richard Mollier in 1923 16 is an alternative psychrometric chart preferred by many users in Germany Austria Switzerland the Netherlands Belgium France Scandinavia Eastern Europe and Russia 17 The underlying psychrometric parameter data for the psychrometric chart and the Mollier diagram are identical At first glance there is little resemblance between the charts but if the chart is rotated by ninety degrees and looked at in a mirror the resemblance becomes apparent The Mollier diagram coordinates are enthalpy and humidity ratio The enthalpy coordinate is skewed and the lines of constant enthalpy are parallel and evenly spaced The ASHRAE psychrometric charts since 1961 use similar plotting coordinates Some psychrometric charts use dry bulb temperature and humidity ratio coordinates See also editAir Air conditioning Dalton s law of Partial Pressures Dew point Dry bulb temperature Evaporative cooling Humidity Operative temperature Relative humidity Wet bulb temperatureReferences edit Henry George Liddell Robert Scott psychron A Greek English Lexicon Henry George Liddell Robert Scott metron A Greek English Lexicon World Meteorological Organisation 2008 Guide to Meteorological Instruments and Methods Of Observation WMO 8 Seventh edition Chapter 2 Measurement of Temperature AMS Weather Glossary American Meteorological Society Archived from the original on 16 October 2012 Retrieved 18 September 2011 http www che iitb ac in courses uglab manuals coollabmanual pdf Archived 2011 07 21 at the Wayback Machine accessed 20080408 http www probec org fileuploads fl120336971099294500CHAP12 Dryers pdf Archived 2011 07 27 at the Wayback Machine accessed 20080408 Archived copy Archived from the original on 2006 10 30 Retrieved 2008 04 10 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Dehumidification in Industrial and Building Applications 2012 Gatley D P 2004 Psychrometric chart celebrates 100th anniversary ASHRAE Journal 46 11 16 20 Module 7 Applying the psychrometric relationships Retrieved 2021 10 13 2001 ASHRAE Handbook Fundamentals SI Scott A Zeh Nancy F Thysell and Jayne E Jackson 2001 p 6 8 Kutz Myer Ed 2006 The Mechanical Engineers Handbook New Jersey John Wiley amp Sons American Society of Heating Refrigerating and Air Conditioning Engineers 1997 ASHRAE Fundamentals Handbook Biasca Karyn Psychrometric Chart Tutorial Archived 2011 01 02 at the Wayback Machine accessed November 20 2010 Hawaii Energy and Environmental Technologies HEET Initiative July 2016 Mollier R 1923 Ein neues diagram fur dampfluftgemische ZVDI 67 9 Todorovic B ASHRAE Transactions DA 07 024 113 1 2007External links edit nbsp Look up psychrometrics or psychrometry in Wiktionary the free dictionary Western Cooling Efficiency Center Psych An Open Source Psychrometric Plug in for Microsoft Excel by Kevin Brown Xchanger Inc webpage Calculator for humidity dew point mass flows amp heat flux for variable pressure systems with compressors blowers vacuum pumps and heat exchangers Corwin s Calculators Calculator for humidity dew point How to read and use a psychrometric chart Free Online Interactive Psychrometric Chart Psychrometric Chart Calculator and Sketcher Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Psychrometrics amp oldid 1202337151, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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