It’s a hygrometer. Nothing special, you might say, but the measuring method is pleasantly interesting. The instrument has two thermometers: one dry and the other wet. The difference in their temperatures is a measure of the relative humidity, which you can read from a table. If only everything were this simple.
I was reminded of this instrument by our preparations for a weather station project, which have been underway for a while now, and our work on a new design for the CO2 meter published in the January 2008 issue. We plan to upgrade the original design with a temperature sensor and a humidity sensor. Naturally, we intend to use a ready-made humidity sensor for this, but the old instrument still has a certain charm, perhaps due to its simplicity or the self-evident operating principle. It seems like you learn something from this instrument. The operating principle is somewhat similar to that of a differential amplifier.
Who knows, maybe one of you will put together an electronic version? Or am I simply making things unnecessarily complicated again?
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ReplyDeleteFor me it's more like a measuring bridge than a differential applifier!? :)
ReplyDeleteAn electronic sensor that uses this principle exists for more than 10 years already, as far as I am aware of. It was (and still is) used in a laundry drier.
ReplyDeleteHello together:
ReplyDeleteA electronic variant of this algorithm was implemented by me about 20 years ago as a customer order. Implementation was done with a 8085 micro processor with PT100 sensors. Programming language was good old INTEL PL/M-80.
And I guess that, long before my implementation, someone has implemented this on a analog computer.
Hello,
ReplyDeletethe "two thermometers instrument" is called a *psychrometer* and well known in physics and meteorology since more than 150 years.
See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psychrometer
For instance, the early scientific balloon pioneers used the psychrometer during their high-flying ballon rides at the end of 19th century, to research on humidity in high atmosphere.