Omega’s HHAQ-106 handheld psychrometer with enthalpy can measure any environment’s ambient temperature, relative humidity (RH), dew point and wet bulb temperatures, absolute humidity (mixing ratio) and enthalpy of vaporization. These measurements are typically made by three groups of users: Water damage restoration contractors, HVAC/R system installers and technicians and professionals charged with monitoring and maintaining the environment of facilities such as office buildings, greenhouses, food and equipment storage facilities, wineries, freezers, shipping containers, computer rooms, labs, libraries, museums and saunas.
The dew point is the temperature below which the water vapor in a volume of air at a given constant barometric pressure will condense into liquid water at the same rate at which it evaporates. Condensed water is called dew when it forms on a solid surface. Another way to think of dew point is as an air saturation temperature associated with relative humidity (RH). A high RH value indicates that the dew point is close to the current ambient air temperature. At 100% RH, the dew point temperature is equal to the ambient temperature because the air is completely saturated with water. The wet bulb temperature is the temperature that a volume of air would have if it were cooled to saturation (100% RH) by the evaporation of water into it, with the latent heat coming from the volume of air. It is the lowest temperature that can be reached under current ambient conditions by the evaporation of water only. The wet bulb temperature is the temperature you feel when your skin is wet and exposed to moving air as opposed to the actual air temperature—the dry bulb temperature. An environment’s absolute humidity level (or mixing ratio) can be measured and expressed in units of grains per pound (GPP) or g/kg. GPP is a more useful moisture metric than RH to water damage remediators. Using RH alone, a remediator might unknowingly introduce moist air—with a low RH but a high GPP—during a job’s drying phase.
The sixth environmental parameter that the HHAQ-106 can measure is enthalpy. Enthalpy is a measure of the amount of energy needed to change the state of a substance from a solid to a liquid or from a liquid to a gas. The most common application for the HHAQ-106 enthalpy-calculating algorithm is measuring the enthalpy of vaporization of air in an HVAC/R system duct.
SPECIFICATIONS Ambient Temperature Measurement Range: -20 to 70°C (-4 to 158°F) Ambient Temperature Measurement Accuracy: 0.5°C (±0.9°F) from -10 to 40°C (14 to 104°F); 1°C (±1.8°F) elsewhere in range Temperature Measurement Resolution: 0.1° RH Measurement Range: 0 to 100% RH Measurement Accuracy: ±3% from 20 to 80% RH; ±3.5% elsewhere RH Measurement Resolution: 0.1% Probe Length: 150 mm (6") Display Size: 38 mm (1.5") diagonal Current Consumption: <10 mA Battery Life: 1000 hours (typical) Dimensions: 209 L x 47 W x 47 mm D (8.23 x 1.85 x 1.85") Weight (Without Battery): 63 g (2.2 oz) Power Source: Three “AA” batteries (included)