Testing Room Atmosphere

The Control Of The Testing Room Atmosphere

  • The THERMOSTATS and HYGROMETER CONTROL VALVES operates by compressed air.
  • The air input to the conditioning plant may come from outside or be recirculated air, or a mixture of both.
  • In all instance it is filtered before heating and conditioning.
  • A fan blows the conditioned air in to the laboratory through special ducts with lowered outlets in the ceiling.
  • All the windows are double glazed used to prevent unwanted air coming in from the corridor when people pass in and out of the laboratory.
  • Automatic two "towers" are used, one for adding moisture and one for subtracting moisture from the air.


Measurement of Moisture Regain

By oven dry method (Direct)


  • It contains the fiber sample in a mesh container.
  • The container is suspended inside the oven from one pan of balance, the mechanism of which is outside the oven.
  • This ensures that the weight of the sample can be monitored without disturbing the system.

ADVANTAGE

  • All the weighing is carried out inside the oven.
  • The use of the conditioning oven to dry a sample is correct standard procedure; any other method of sample drying has to be checked for accuracy against it.
  • The use of the conditioning oven to dry a sample is correct standard procedure; any other method of sample drying has to be checked for accuracy against it.

Measurement of Atmospheric Moisture

Wet & Dry Bulb Hygrometer


  • This is an instrument equipped with two thermometers, side by side.
  • The bulb of one of the thermometers is covered with a muslin wick dipping into water.
  • The water is absorbed up the muslin and evaporates, cooling.
  • The difference between the wet and dry bulb temperatures is called the wet bulb depression.
  • If the air is fully saturated (100% relative humidity) the water cannot evaporate, so both the wet and dry bulb temperatures are the same.
                                                            

Hair Hygrometer


  • These devices use a human or animal hair under tension.
  • The hair is hygroscopic (tending toward retaining moisture); its length changes with humidity, and the length change may be magnified by a mechanism and indicated on a dial or scale.
  • The traditional folk art device known as a weather house works on this principle. Whale bone and other materials may be used in place of hair.
  • This instrument uses strands of human or horse hair with the oils removed attached to levers that magnify a small change in hair length.