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Humidity Calculation Formulas Guide

The document provides a comprehensive guide on humidity conversion formulas, including definitions of relative humidity, calculations for dewpoint, mixing ratio, enthalpy, absolute humidity, and parts per million (ppm). It outlines various formulas and examples for calculating these parameters under different conditions and temperatures. Additionally, it discusses the enhancement factor related to water vapor saturation pressures in the presence of other gases.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
21 views17 pages

Humidity Calculation Formulas Guide

The document provides a comprehensive guide on humidity conversion formulas, including definitions of relative humidity, calculations for dewpoint, mixing ratio, enthalpy, absolute humidity, and parts per million (ppm). It outlines various formulas and examples for calculating these parameters under different conditions and temperatures. Additionally, it discusses the enhancement factor related to water vapor saturation pressures in the presence of other gases.

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Bông Bông
Copyright
© All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

HUMIDITY CONVERSION FORMULAS

Calculation formulas for humidity

B210973EN-F
_________________________________________________________________________________

Table of Contents
1. Relative humidity definitions ............................................................ 3
2. Water vapour saturation pressure .................................................... 4
3. Calculation of dewpoint from RH...................................................... 7
3.1 Calculation of dewpoint at different pressure............................ 7
3.2 Calculation of RH from dewpoint and ambient temperature .... 8
4. Using psychrometers ........................................................................ 9
5. Mixing ratio ........................................................................................10
6. Enthalpy .............................................................................................11
7. Absolute humidity .............................................................................12
8. Parts per million (ppm) .....................................................................13
9. Enhancement factor..........................................................................15

1. Relative humidity definitions


Relative humidity is at all temperatures and pressures defined as the ratio of the water
vapour pressure to the saturation water vapour pressure (over water) at the gas
temperature:

RH = Pw/Pws · 100% (1)

The total pressure does not enter the definition. Above 100°C the same definition is valid.
But as the saturation vapour pressure Pws is greater than 1 013 hPa (normal ambient
pressure) the RH can't reach 100% in an unpressurised system.

Below 0°C the definition is also valid. Here 100%RH is also impossible because
condensation will occur at a lower humidity than 100% (when the vapour is saturated
against ice).

_________________________________________________________________________ 3
Humidity Conversion Formulas ________________________________________________________

2. Water vapour saturation pressure


The following formula gives the water vapour saturation pressure to sufficient accuracy
between 0°C and 373°C ( W. Wagner and A. Pruß:" The IAPWS Formulation 1995 for the
Thermodynamic Properties of Ordinary Water Substance for General and Scientific Use ",
Journal of Physical and Chemical Reference Data, June 2002 ,Volume 31, Issue 2, pp.
387535):

T
ϑ = 1− (2)
Tc

 Pws  Tc
In = (
C1ϑ + C 2ϑ 1.5 + C 3ϑ 3 + C 4ϑ 3.5 + C 5ϑ 4 + C6ϑ 7.5 ) (3)
 Pc  T

T = Temperature in K

Pws = Saturation vapor pressure (hPa)

Tc = Critical temperature, 647.096 K

Pc = Critical pressure 220 640 hPa

Ci = Coefficients,

C1 = -7.85951783

C2 = 1.84408259

C3 = -11.7866497

C4 = 22.6807411

C5 = -15.9618719

C6 = 1.80122502

4 ____________________________________________________________________ B210973EN-F
_________________________________________________________________________________

Correspondingly the saturation water vapour pressure over ice at temperatures between
-100 and 0.01°C can be calculated using:

T
θ= (4)
Tn

 Pwi 
In (
 = a0 1 − θ
−1.5
) (
+ a1 1 − θ −1.25 ) (5)
 Pn 

T = Temperature in K

Pn = Vapor pressure at triple point temperature, 6.11657 hPa

Tn = Triple point temperature 273.16 K

Pwi = Saturation vapor pressure (hPa)

ai = Coefficients,

a0 = -13.928169

a1 = 34.707823

If lower accuracy or a limited temperature range can be tolerated a simpler formula can be
used for the water vapour saturation pressure over water (and over ice):

 m⋅T 
 T +T 
Pws = A ⋅10  n 
(hPa) , where (6)

A, m, Tn = constants see Table 1

T = Temperature (°C)

________________________________________________________________________ 5
Humidity Conversion Formulas ________________________________________________________

max
A m Tn error Temperature range
6.116441 7.591386 240.7263 0.083% -20...+50°C
6.004918 7.337936 229.3975 0.017% +50...+100°C
water

5.856548 7.27731 225.1033 0.003% +100...+150°C


6.002859 7.290361 227.1704 0.007% +150...+200°C
9.980622 7.388931 263.1239 0.395% +200...+350°C
6.089613 7.33502 230.3921 0.368% 0...+200°C

ice 6.114742 9.778707 273.1466 0.052% -70...0°C

Table 1. Constants for formula 6.

6 ____________________________________________________________________ B210973EN-F
_________________________________________________________________________________

3. Calculation of dewpoint from RH


Calculate Pws using formula (3) or (6)

Calculate Pw = Pws · RH/100 (in hPa!)

Calculate dewpoint using formula (7):

Tn
Td = (7)
 
 m 
 − 1
 10  Pw  
 log A  
 

The constants in formula (7) are the same as for formula (6).

Example:

The ambient temperature is 40°C and the RH is 50%. Calculate Td:

Pw = Pws(40°C) · 50/100 = 36.88 hPa

Td = 240.7263/(7.591386/10log(36.88/6.116441)-1) = 27.6°C

3.1 Calculation of dewpoint at different pressure


1. Calculate Pws using formula (3) or (6)

2. Calculate measured vapor pressure (at measurement pressure)

RH
Pw meas = Pws ⋅ (8)
100

3. Multiply with pressure ratio:

Ppres
Pw pres = ⋅ Pw meas (9)
Pmeas

________________________________________________________________________ 7
Humidity Conversion Formulas ________________________________________________________

4. Calculate dewpoint at process pressure:

Tn
Td pres =
 
 
 m
−1
 10  Pw pres  
 log A  
    (10)

3.2 Calculation of RH from dewpoint and ambient


temperature

Pws(Td)
RH =100% ⋅ (11)
Pws(Tambient)

Pws may be calculated using formulas (3) or (6). If the simplified formula (6) is used the
expression for RH may be further simplified to:

 Td Tambient 
m −
Tambient+Tn 
RH =100% ⋅10  Td+Tn
(12)

Values for the constants M and Tn for the appropriate temperature range can be found in
Table 1.

8 ____________________________________________________________________ B210973EN-F
_________________________________________________________________________________

4. Using psychrometers
The drybulb-temperature Tdry and the wetbulb-temperature Twet can be converted into Pw
using formula (13):

Pw = Pws (Twet) - Ptot · K · (Tdry - Twet) , where (13)

Pws = Water vapour saturation pressure from formula (6)

Ptot = Total ambient pressure

K = Psychrometer constant 0.000662°C-1

When Pw is known RH can be calculated using (1) or Td can be calculated using (7)

Example:

Twet is 38.5°C, Tdry = 40.0°C and the ambient pressure is 1 013 hPa. Calculate RH and Td:

Pws(38.5°C) = 68.05 hPa


Pws(40.0°C) = 73.75 hPa

Pw = 68.05 - 1013 · 0.000662 · (40.0-38.5) = 67.04 (hPa)

RH = 67.04/73.75 · 100 = 90.9%

Td = 240.7263/(7.591386/10log(67.04/6.116441)-1) = 38.21°C

_________________________________________________________________________ 9
Humidity Conversion Formulas ________________________________________________________

5. Mixing ratio
The mixing ratio (mass of water vapour/mass of dry gas) is calculated using (14):

X = B·Pw/(Ptot-Pw) [g/kg] , where (14)

B = 621.9907 g/kg

The value of B depends on the gas. 621.9907 g/kg is valid for air.

In general the constant can be calculated using:

B=M(H2O)/M(gas) · 1000 [g/kg] , where (15)

M(H2O) = Molecular weight of water

M(gas) = Molecular weight of gas

For instance for hydrogen we get

B = 18.015/2.016 · 1000 = 8 936 g/kg

Example:

The dewpoint Td is 40°C and the total ambient pressure Ptot is 998 hPa. Calculate mixing
ratio:

Pw = Pws(40°C) = 73.75 hPa

X = 621.9907 · 73.75/(998-73.75) = 49.63 g/kg

(To obtain the mixing ratio in units of grains/pound use B = 4 354 [grains/pound])

10 ___________________________________________________________________ B210973EN-F
_________________________________________________________________________________

6. Enthalpy
Enthalpy can be calculated from mixing ratio using (16):

h = T · (1.01 + 0.00189X) + 2.5X (kJ/kg) , where (16)

T = Temperature (°C)

X = Mixing ratio (g/kg)

To convert to Btu/lb divide by 2.324

Note that a different base temperature for zero enthalpy, 0°F is often used together with
the Btu/lb unit.

Example:

The ambient temperature is 20°C and the relative humidity is 50%. Calculate enthalpy:

Pw = Pws(20°C) · 50/100 = 11.69 hPa

X = 621.9907 · 11.69/(1013-11.69) = 7.26 g/kg

h = 20 · (1.01 + 0.00189 · 7.26) + 2.5 · 7.26 = 38.62 kJ/kg

________________________________________________________________________ 11
Humidity Conversion Formulas ________________________________________________________

7. Absolute humidity
Absolute humidity is defined as the mass of water vapour in a certain volume. If ideal gas
behaviour is assumed the absolute humidity can be calculated using (17):

A = C · Pw/T (g/m3) , where (17)

C = Constant 2.16679 gK/J

Pw = Vapour pressure in Pa

T = Temperature in K

Example:

The ambient temperature is 20°C and the relative humidity is 80%. Calculate absolute
humidity:

Pw = Pws(20°C) · 80/100 = 18.7 hPa

A = 2.16679 · 1870/(273.15+20) = 13.82 g/m3

12 ___________________________________________________________________ B210973EN-F
_________________________________________________________________________________

8. Parts per million (ppm)


Parts per million values are usually given vs. the amount of dry air:

I: Volume/volume PPMv(dry):

Pw
PPM v = 10 6 (18)
Ptot − Pw

Where

Pw = Water vapour pressure

Ptot = Total pressure

II: Mass/mass PPMm(dry)

M w Pw
PPM m = 10 6
M d (Ptot − Pw )

Mw
= 0.62199 (19)
Md

Where

Pw = Water vapour pressure

Ptot = Total pressure

Mw = Molecular mass of water

Md = Molecular mass of dry air

From wet air:

III: Volume/volume PPMv(wet):

Pw 6
PPM v = 10 (20)
Ptot

________________________________________________________________________ 13
Humidity Conversion Formulas ________________________________________________________

IV: Mass/mass PPMm(wet)

M w Pw 6
PPM m = 10
M d Ptot

Mw
= 0.62199 (21)
Md

Example:

The dewpoint is 7°C and the total pressure is 998 hPa. Calculate PPMv(dry).

By using formula (6) with the dewpoint temperature , Pw=Pws(Td), we get Pws(7°C) = 10.02
hPa. Now:

10.02
PPM v = 10 6 = 10142
(998 −10.02)

14 ___________________________________________________________________ B210973EN-F
_________________________________________________________________________________

9. Enhancement factor
The water vapour saturation pressures described in Paragraph 2 are exactly valid only in
vacuum (water vapour is the only gas present). If other gases are present the real
saturation vapour pressure Pws will increase. For ambient pressure and lower pressures
this effect is typically ignored. But at pressures significantly above ambient it has to be
taken into account. The enhancement factor f has been defined as follows:

Xw ⋅P
f = , where (22)
Pws

Xw = The mole fraction of water vapour in the gas phase

P = Total pressure

Pws = The saturation water vapour pressure (from Paragraph 2)

xw · P is in effect the water vapour pressure at saturation at pressure P

For CO2-free air the following equation for f has been proposed (Greenspan: J. of Research
of the NBS vol 80A, No. 1 p 41-44)

  P   P 
α 1− ws  + β  −1
  P   Pws 
f =e (23)

The parameters α and β depend on the temperature as follows:


4
α = ∑ Ai t (i−1) (24)
i=1

∑ Bi t (i−1)
β = e i=1 (25)

T = Temperature (°C)

________________________________________________________________________ 15
Humidity Conversion Formulas ________________________________________________________

The parameters Ai and Bi are listed below:

water -50 to 0°C water 0 to 100°C ice -100 to 0°C

A1 3.62183 · 10-4 3.53624 · 10-4 3.64449 · 10-4

A2 2.60553 · 10-5 2.93228 · 10-5 2.93631 · 10-5

A3 3.86501 · 10-7 2.61474 · 10-7 4.88635 · 10-7

A4 3.82449 · 10-9 8.57538 · 10-9 4.36543 · 10-9

B1 -10.7604 -10.7588 -10.7271

B2 6.39725 · 10-2 6.32529 · 10-2 7.61989 · 10-2

B3 -2.63416 · 10-4 -2.53591 · 10-4 -1.74771 · 10-4

B4 1.67254 · 10-6 6.33784 · 10-7 2.46721 · 10-6

The formulas above are fitted for the pressure range 1 ... 20 atm.

for instance at 20°C ad 10 bars f = 1.031

16 ___________________________________________________________________ B210973EN-F

Common questions

Powered by AI

Different formulas for saturation vapor pressure are used across temperature ranges to optimize accuracy according to the specific physical characteristics of vapor at various temperatures. For example, formulas differentiate between calculations over water and ice and adjust constants to reflect accurate saturation pressures. This distinction is crucial for accurate scientific applications and engineering processes, where precise vapor pressure data underpins design and operational integrity .

Simplifying the water vapor saturation pressure formula might be necessary for practical applications where computational resources or precision requirements are constrained. Simplified formulas reduce complexity by approximating constants and narrowing the temperature range for which they are valid. These simplifications ensure ease of use and quick calculations, balancing accuracy with accessibility for routine assessments .

The calculation of enthalpy incorporates both the air temperature and the mixing ratio (mass of water vapor per mass of dry gas), reflecting energy content due to temperature and vapor content. The formula combines these variables to provide a comprehensive energy measure of the air mixture, critical for applications in energy and heat flow calculations in HVAC systems and meteorological analysis .

Psychrometers use the dry-bulb and wet-bulb temperatures to calculate the water vapor pressure using established formulae, incorporating total ambient pressure and a psychrometer constant. Once vapor pressure is known, relative humidity can be computed from the ratio of vapor pressures, while dewpoint is derived using further calculations with temperature constants. This methodology allows accurate determination of humidity levels based on physical temperature readings .

The mixing ratio, defined as the mass of water vapor per mass of dry gas, is crucial for understanding humidity as it provides a measure of humidity independent of temperature and pressure. By using a constant specific to the gases involved, it quantifies water vapor content relative to dry air, aiding comparisons and calculations of atmospheric conditions .

Calculating dewpoint from relative humidity requires knowledge of temperature and pressure because saturation vapor pressure (Pws) depends on temperature, affecting the dewpoint calculation. Additionally, the dewpoint is pressure-sensitive, particularly when measuring at different atmospheric pressures, necessitating adjustments to reflect these variable conditions accurately . These calculations ensure precise determination of dewpoint by considering both ambient and measurement pressures .

Assuming ideal gas behavior in absolute humidity calculations allows simplification of the humidity equation, treating water vapor as an ideal gas. This assumption ensures that density calculations remain unaffected by real gas deviations, which could be particularly relevant at higher pressures or variable temperatures, where real gas behavior might diverge significantly. These assumptions lead to equations that are generally applicable for standard atmospheric conditions, providing practical estimates for most scenarios .

Relative humidity is defined as the ratio of the water vapor pressure to the saturation water vapor pressure (Pws) at the gas temperature, expressed as a percentage: RH = Pw/Pws · 100%. This definition holds at all temperatures and pressures. However, RH cannot reach 100% in an unpressurized system when the saturation vapor pressure exceeds normal ambient pressure (above 100°C). Similarly, below 0°C, condensation occurs before RH reaches 100% when vapor is saturated against ice .

The PPM calculation for dry air does not include the volume or mass of water vapor when determining the concentration of water vapor, whereas the calculation for wet air does. This difference impacts the base used for the calculations and consequently the resultant PPM value, which reflects the proportion of water vapor concerning different baselines. These variance considerations ensure accurate representation of vapor concentration under differing environmental conditions .

The enhancement factor accounts for the increase in real saturation vapor pressure when gases other than water vapor are present. This factor becomes significant at pressures above ambient. It modifies the calculated saturation vapor pressure to reflect these conditions more accurately . The enhancement factor is defined mathematically and includes temperature-dependent parameters, ensuring accurate pressure calculations under varying environmental conditions .

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