Measuring relative humidity from evaporation with a wet-bulb thermometer: the psychrometer
Marie Corpart, Fr\'ed\'eric Restagno, Fran\c{c}ois Boulogne

TL;DR
This paper explains how a psychrometer measures relative humidity using evaporative cooling, combining a theoretical model and experimental setup to enhance undergraduate teaching of measurement and thermodynamics principles.
Contribution
It introduces a pedagogical model and experimental setup for demonstrating psychrometry, emphasizing its educational value in teaching measurement and thermodynamics.
Findings
The psychrometer's principle is demonstrated through a model and experiment.
Educational potential for undergraduate teaching of thermodynamics and fluid mechanics.
The difference in thermometer readings correlates with relative humidity.
Abstract
Measuring the relative humidity of air is an important challenge for meteorological measurements, food conservation, building design, and evaporation control, among other applications. Relative humidity can be measured with a psychrometer, which is a hygrometer composed of two identical thermometers. The bulb of one thermometer is covered by a wick soaked with water so that evaporative cooling makes it indicate a lower temperature than the dry-bulb thermometer; it is possible to determine the relative humidity from the difference between these readings. We describe both a model and an experimental setup to illustrate the principle of a psychrometer for a pedagogical laboratory. The science of psychrometry could be more broadly taught at the undergraduate level to help introduce students to aspects of measurement techniques, fluid mechanics, heat transfer, and non-equilibrium…
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Taxonomy
TopicsExperimental and Theoretical Physics Studies
