Please login with a confirmed email address before reporting spam
Posted:
8 years ago
23 déc. 2016, 06:44 UTC−5
If I understood your question correctly you want to express the relative humidty of the air in mol/m^3?. I would suggest you look at a "Psychrometric chart", eg
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psychrometrics#/media/File:PsychrometricChart.SeaLevel.SI.svg
You then find where the 40% relative humidity intersects with the 25 deg C temperature and read off the humidity ratio which looks to be about 0,008 g water per g dry air (you can interpolate more accurately by measuring with a ruler).
Then you convert g water to mole and g air to m^3 air.
cheers
If I understood your question correctly you want to express the relative humidty of the air in mol/m^3?. I would suggest you look at a "Psychrometric chart", eg https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psychrometrics#/media/File:PsychrometricChart.SeaLevel.SI.svg
You then find where the 40% relative humidity intersects with the 25 deg C temperature and read off the humidity ratio which looks to be about 0,008 g water per g dry air (you can interpolate more accurately by measuring with a ruler).
Then you convert g water to mole and g air to m^3 air.
cheers
Please login with a confirmed email address before reporting spam
Posted:
8 years ago
23 déc. 2016, 08:59 UTC−5
Wow! Thank you very much.
I got it pretty well.
Thanks once again for making me proceed with my work.
Wow! Thank you very much.
I got it pretty well.
Thanks once again for making me proceed with my work.
Henrik Sönnerlind
COMSOL Employee
Please login with a confirmed email address before reporting spam
Posted:
8 years ago
23 déc. 2016, 09:32 UTC−5
By the way, you can also select to give the input in terms of mass concentration.
Either way, the humidity in in the surrounding air serves as a boundary condition for the moisture concentration in the solid you will analyze. It is not trivial how to transform the values in the surrounding air to values inside the solid.
The discussion in the documentation for this example:
www.comsol.com/model/mems-pressure-sensor-drift-due-to-hygroscopic-swelling-21021
will probably be of interest.
Regards,
Henrik
By the way, you can also select to give the input in terms of mass concentration.
Either way, the humidity in in the surrounding air serves as a boundary condition for the moisture concentration in the solid you will analyze. It is not trivial how to transform the values in the surrounding air to values inside the solid.
The discussion in the documentation for this example:
https://www.comsol.com/model/mems-pressure-sensor-drift-due-to-hygroscopic-swelling-21021
will probably be of interest.
Regards,
Henrik
Please login with a confirmed email address before reporting spam
Posted:
8 years ago
26 déc. 2016, 04:56 UTC−5
Thanks a lot sir. I appreciate your support.
Still facing some challenges though.
This property, CHS (Coefficient of Hygroscopic Swelling), I can't find a value for Polypyrrole.
I've worked on a variety of polymers with properties close to polypyrrole but the CHS varies a lot.
Any clue may help me. Thank you.
Thanks a lot sir. I appreciate your support.
Still facing some challenges though.
This property, CHS (Coefficient of Hygroscopic Swelling), I can't find a value for Polypyrrole.
I've worked on a variety of polymers with properties close to polypyrrole but the CHS varies a lot.
Any clue may help me. Thank you.