Relative Humidity Calculator
Calculate relative humidity using dry wet bulb temperature accurately.
| Parameter | Value | Unit |
|---|---|---|
| Dry Bulb Temp | 25.0 | °C |
| Wet Bulb Temp | 20.0 | °C |
| Saturation VP (Dry) | 31.69 | hPa |
| Actual VP | 19.83 | hPa |
Understanding Calculating Relative Humidity Using Dry Wet Bulb Temperature
Calculating relative humidity using dry wet bulb temperature is a fundamental process in meteorology, HVAC engineering, and agriculture. It provides a precise measure of the moisture content in the air by comparing the ambient temperature (dry bulb) with the temperature of an evaporating surface (wet bulb). This method remains the gold standard for manual humidity measurement due to its reliability and grounding in thermodynamic principles.
What is Relative Humidity and the Psychrometric Method?
Relative Humidity (RH) represents the ratio of the current amount of water vapor in the air to the maximum amount it could hold at that specific temperature. The method of calculating relative humidity using dry wet bulb temperature relies on the principle of evaporative cooling.
The “Dry Bulb” is the air temperature measured by a standard thermometer. The “Wet Bulb” is measured by a thermometer with a bulb wrapped in a wet muslin cloth. As water evaporates from the cloth, it absorbs heat, lowering the temperature reading. Drier air causes faster evaporation and a lower wet bulb temperature relative to the dry bulb.
Psychrometric Formula and Mathematical Explanation
To perform this calculation mathematically, we typically use the August-Roche-Magnus approximation for saturation vapor pressure, combined with a psychrometric equation (often Ferrel’s equation). Here is the step-by-step logic:
1. Calculate Saturation Vapor Pressure ($E_s$) at the Wet Bulb Temperature:
Using the Magnus formula:
$E_{sw} = 6.112 \times \exp\left(\frac{17.67 \times T_{wet}}{T_{wet} + 243.5}\right)$
2. Calculate Actual Vapor Pressure ($E$):
Using the psychrometric constant derived from pressure:
$E = E_{sw} – P \times A \times (T_{dry} – T_{wet})$
Where $P$ is atmospheric pressure and $A$ is the psychrometer coefficient (approx. $0.000666$ for standard aspirated psychrometers).
3. Calculate Saturation Vapor Pressure at Dry Bulb ($E_{sd}$):
$E_{sd} = 6.112 \times \exp\left(\frac{17.67 \times T_{dry}}{T_{dry} + 243.5}\right)$
4. Calculate Relative Humidity ($RH$):
$RH = \left(\frac{E}{E_{sd}}\right) \times 100$
| Variable | Meaning | Typical Unit | Typical Range |
|---|---|---|---|
| $T_{dry}$ | Dry Bulb Temperature | °C | -20 to 50 |
| $T_{wet}$ | Wet Bulb Temperature | °C | Always $\le T_{dry}$ |
| $P$ | Atmospheric Pressure | hPa | 950 to 1050 |
| $E$ | Vapor Pressure | hPa | 0 to 50+ |
Practical Examples (Real-World Use Cases)
Example 1: Greenhouse Management
A greenhouse manager needs to ensure optimal growing conditions. They measure a dry bulb temperature of 25°C and a wet bulb temperature of 20°C.
- Inputs: Dry: 25°C, Wet: 20°C, Pressure: 1013 hPa.
- Depression: 5°C difference indicates moderate evaporation.
- Result: The calculator shows approx 63% RH.
- Interpretation: This is a healthy range for many plants, balancing transpiration and hydration.
Example 2: Paint Curing in Construction
An industrial painter is checking if conditions are safe for epoxy application. The specification requires RH below 85%.
- Inputs: Dry: 30°C, Wet: 29°C.
- Depression: Only 1°C difference.
- Result: The calculation yields approx 92% RH.
- Interpretation: The air is nearly saturated. Painting must be halted as the solvent will not evaporate properly, leading to defects.
How to Use This Relative Humidity Calculator
- Select Unit: Choose Celsius or Fahrenheit based on your thermometer type.
- Enter Dry Bulb: Input the standard air temperature reading.
- Enter Wet Bulb: Input the reading from the wetted thermometer. Ensure it is lower than or equal to the dry bulb.
- Adjust Pressure (Optional): For high-altitude locations, reduce the pressure (standard is 1013.25 hPa).
- Analyze Results: View the calculated RH percentage, dew point, and vapor pressure in the results dashboard.
Key Factors That Affect Results
When calculating relative humidity using dry wet bulb temperature, several variables influence accuracy:
- Airflow/Ventilation: Proper airflow (at least 3 m/s) over the wet bulb is crucial to ensure maximum evaporation rate. Stagnant air leads to artificially high wet bulb readings.
- Wick Cleanliness: A dirty or crusted wick on the wet bulb prevents water uptake, causing inaccurate readings.
- Atmospheric Pressure: Lower pressure (high altitude) increases the rate of evaporation, slightly altering the psychrometric constant.
- Water Purity: Distilled water should be used. Minerals in tap water can coat the wick and reduce evaporation.
- Thermometer Accuracy: Even a 0.5°C error in one thermometer can skew RH results by 5-10%.
- Radiation Errors: Direct sunlight on the thermometers will raise the dry bulb temperature artificially without affecting moisture content, distorting the calculation.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
No. In natural atmospheric conditions, evaporation cools the wet bulb, making it lower than or equal to the dry bulb. If your wet bulb reading is higher, check your instruments or data entry.
If both temperatures are identical, no evaporation is occurring. This indicates the air is fully saturated, meaning the Relative Humidity is 100%.
Pressure affects the psychrometric constant ($A$). While the effect is small at sea level, significant altitude changes (e.g., in aviation or mountain meteorology) require pressure adjustment for precise calculating relative humidity.
Dew point is the temperature to which air must be cooled to become saturated with water vapor. It is a direct measure of atmospheric moisture content, unlike RH which is relative to temperature.
Yes. HVAC technicians frequently use dry wet bulb temperature methods to determine cooling coil performance and verify system charges.
When performed correctly with an aspirated psychrometer, it is one of the most accurate methods available, typically within ±1-2% RH.
Yes. If the wet bulb freezes, the latent heat of sublimation differs from evaporation. This calculator is optimized for liquid water phases (above 0°C wet bulb) but provides approximations near freezing.
The “depression” is the difference between dry and wet bulb temps. A larger depression indicates drier air (lower RH), while a smaller depression indicates more humid air.
Related Tools and Internal Resources
Explore more tools to assist with your atmospheric and environmental calculations:
- Dew Point Calculator – Focus specifically on saturation temperature.
- Vapor Pressure Deficit Tool – Essential for agricultural planning.
- Heat Index Calculator – Combine temperature and humidity for safety.
- Air Density Calculator – Adjust for temperature and pressure.
- Absolute Humidity Converter – Convert RH to g/m³.
- Psychrometric Chart Visualizer – View the complete air property graph.