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Sunday, September 16, 2018

HUMIDITY AND ANESTHESIA

  • Absolute humidity is the mass of water vapour present in a given volume of gas at
    defined temperature and pressure (expressed as g of H2O/m3 of gas).
  • Relative humidity is the mass of water vapour present in a given volume of gas,
    expressed as a percentage of the mass of water vapour required to saturate the same volume of gas at identical temperature and pressure.
  • The amount of water vapour required to saturate a known volume of gas increases with temperature, i.e. a gas saturated at 20°C contains less water than the same volume, saturated at 37°C
  • Relative humidity (RH), can be calculated from the ratio of the mass of water vapour present (mP), to the mass required for satruation (mS) as
    RH = mP/mS
  • If droplets are present, supersaturation has occurred and relative humidity exceeds 100%.
  • From the gas laws, mass of a gas in a mixture is proportional to the partial pressure it exerts, thus: RH = water vapour pressure/ saturated water vapour pressure
  • Instruments used to measure humidity are called hygrometers. Examples include:
    Regnault’s hygrometer
    Hair hygrometer
    Wet and dry bulb thermometers
    Humidity transducers

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