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INTERNATIONAL ACTIVITIES AT THE NMISA HUMIDITY LABORATORY DURING 2009/2010 Deona Jonker

INTERNATIONAL ACTIVITIES AT THE NMISA HUMIDITY LABORATORY DURING 2009/2010 Deona Jonker. Introduction. Need for traceable measurements in the temperature range 5 °C to 55 °C (humidity range 10 % rh to 95 % rh ) Saturated and unsaturated salts provide traceable

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INTERNATIONAL ACTIVITIES AT THE NMISA HUMIDITY LABORATORY DURING 2009/2010 Deona Jonker

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  1. INTERNATIONAL ACTIVITIES AT THE NMISA HUMIDITY LABORATORY DURING 2009/2010 Deona Jonker

  2. Introduction • Need for traceable measurements in the temperature range • 5 °C to 55 °C (humidity range 10 %rh to 95 %rh) • Saturated and unsaturated salts provide traceable • measurements only over temperature range of 15 °C to • 30 °C • Bilateral comparison between NMISA and Mikes (Finland) – • compare relative humidity calibration capabilities over • temperature range 5 °C to 55 °C and humidity range 10 %rh • to 95 %rh

  3. Introduction (continued) • NMISA two-pressure generator used in follow-up • measurements to investigate results of bilateral comparison • Two posters presented by NMISA at Tempmeko–ISHM 2010 • symposium

  4. NMISA – MIKES Bilateral Comparison • Comparison arrangements and measurements • Five thermohygrometers used in comparison • Comparison range: • Humidity – 10 %rh to 95 %rh • Temperature – 5 °C to 55 °C; 10 °C intervals (six • temperature points) • Calibrations at MIKES: • By comparison with chilled mirror hygrometers in climatic • chamber

  5. NMISA – MIKES Bilateral Comparison (continued) • Constant temperature; rising humidity; air flow over • sensors • Calibration at NMISA: • In small 100 ml chambers placed in large temperature- • and humidity-variable chamber • Against reference unsaturated salt solutions • Metal filters not removed from sensors • No air flow over sensors • Constant humidity and rising temperature

  6. NMISA – MIKES Bilateral Comparison (continued) • MIKES measured transfer standard set before and after • initial measurements at NMISA • MIKES compiled comparison report • Comparison results: • Results obtained with fifth hygrometer (MI70) agreed • fairly well at most of measurement points • Transfer standard set showed non-linearity in high • humidity range and few other points

  7. NMISA – MIKES Bilateral Comparison (continued) • Possible reasons: • Metal filters over sensors should been removed when • measuring in static conditions (no air flow) • Using the same salt solution at different temperature • points

  8. NMISA – MIKES Bilateral Comparison (continued) • Follow-up measurements: to investigate the influence of metal filters on sensors • Use same 100 ml chambers placed in temperature- and • humidity-variable chamber • Measuring points: • 10 %rh at 5 °C and 15 °C • 50 %rh at 25 °C and 35 °C • 90 %rh at 45 °C and 55 °C • Unsaturated salt solutions as reference standards

  9. NMISA – MIKES Bilateral Comparison (continued) • No air flow over sensors • Metal filters removed from sensors • Results - influence of metal filters much more significant for • transfer standard set than for fifth hygrometer (MI70) • Good laboratory practice to remove filters from sensors • during calibration

  10. NMISA Two-Pressure Generator • Design and improvements made • Generator originally consisted of: • Saturator – 0.9 m long, made of one inch diameter, • stainless steel tubing • 70 L stirred bath • Air bath – to control temperature of test chamber • Compressed air supplied to mass flow controller • to saturator through heat exchanger coil (app. 1.6 m) • to T-piece

  11. NMISA Two-Pressure Generator (continued) • to chilled mirror dew point meter and test chamber for • relative humidity measurements • Pressure and temperature were constantly monitored • Initial design of generator lacked sufficient and proper • temperature equilibrium and air saturation • Modifications: • Add second liquid bath with independent temperature • control

  12. NMISA Two-Pressure Generator (continued) • Bath contains heat exchanger coil (6 m long, made of • 6.35 mm diameter stainless steel tubing) and pre- • saturator coil (1.45 m long, made of 25.4 mm diameter • stainless steel tubing) • Bath placed between mass flow controller and saturator • bath • Heat exchanger coil removed – caused leak in system • Dry air to mass flow controller – to pre-saturator – to main • saturator (no heat exchanger) • Air bath replaced with temperature-variable chamber

  13. NMISA Two-Pressure Generator (continued) • Follow-up measurements: to investigate air flow over sensors • Generator used to investigate influence of air flow over • sensors during calibration • Generator outlet connected to small stainless steel • chambers, connected in series • Small chambers placed in large temperature- and humidity • variable chamber • Flow rate over sensors app. 0.5 l/min

  14. NMISA Two-Pressure Generator (continued) • Measurements performed at 5 °C; 25 °C and 55 °C • At each temperature point – humidity measurements at 10 • %rh to 95 %rh and back to 10 %rh • Measurements with two-pressure generator agreed much • better with MIKES’ results for transfer standard set than did • NMISA’s initial measurements

  15. NMISA Two-pressure generator (continued) Figure 1. Results of the laboratories obtained with the transfer standard set at +5 °C. Error bars show the estimated expanded uncertainty.

  16. NMISA Two-pressure generator (continued) Figure 2. Results of the laboratories obtained with the transfer standard set at +25 °C. Error bars show the estimated expanded uncertainty. (Note: the NMISA result at 95 %rh is off scale (12.9 ± 1.2 %rh)

  17. NMISA Two-pressure generator (continued) Figure 3. Results of the laboratories obtained with the transfer standard set at +45 °C. Error bars show the estimated expanded uncertainty.

  18. NMISA Two-pressure generator (continued) Figure 4. Results of the laboratories obtained with the transfer standard set at +55 °C. Error bars show the estimated expanded uncertainty.

  19. NMISA Two-pressure generator (continued) Figure 5. Results of the laboratories obtained with the fifth hygrometer at +5 °C. Error bars show the estimated expanded uncertainty. The long-term instability is not included.

  20. NMISA Two-pressure generator (continued) Figure 6. Results of the laboratories obtained with the fifth hygrometer at +25 °C. Error bars show the estimated expanded uncertainty. The long-term instability is not included.

  21. NMISA Two-pressure generator (continued) Figure 7. Results of the laboratories obtained with the fifth hygrometer at +35 °C. Error bars show the estimated expanded uncertainty. The long-term instability is not included.

  22. NMISA Two-pressure generator (continued) Figure 8. Results of the laboratories obtained with the fifth hygrometer at +55 °C. Error bars show the estimated expanded uncertainty. The long-term instability is not included.

  23. Tempmeko-ISHM 2010 Symposium • Joint International Symposium on Temperature, Humidity, • Moisture and Thermal Measurements in Industry and • Science – Tempmeko-ISHM 2010, 31 May to 4 June 2010, • Portoroz, Slovenia • Two posters presented: • Improvements made to the NMISA two-pressure • generator • Bilateral comparison of relative humidity standards • between NMISA and MIKES

  24. Tempmeko-ISHM 2010 Symposium (continued) • Typical topics discussed: • Development / improvement of primary humidity • standards (humidity generators) • Hygrometer and moisture sensor developments • Humidity uncertainty estimations • Interlaboratory comparisons • Calibration procedures • Calibration facilities • Industrial applications of humidity measurements

  25. Tempmeko-ISHM 2010 Symposium (continued) • Presentations on interlaboratory comparisons: • Dew-point temperature realizations in the range -50 °C to • +20 °C; 24 NMIs (22 EURAMET, South Africa, Russia) • participated • Bilateral comparison between Egypt (NIS) and Turkey • (TUBITAK UME); dew and frost point temperatures over • the range -40 °C to + 50 °C • Comparison of frost-point temperature scales between • -80 °C and -10 °C; MIKES (Finland), INRIM (Italy), • LNE-CETIAT (France) participated

  26. Tempmeko-ISHM 2010 Symposium (continued) • Presentations on humidity standards: • NIST presented paper on their newly developed • second-generation gravimetric hygrometer and steam • generator • National Metrology Institute of Japan (NMIJ) established • primary humidity standard in trace moisture region using • diffusion tube method • New primary low- and high-range dew-point generators • developed by Croatian NMI in cooperation with MIKES

  27. Tempmeko-ISHM 2010 Symposium (continued) • Paper on psychrometer comparison between NMIs • Denmark, Slovenia, Finland • Paper on homogeneity and stability of humidity test • chambers • Measurement of moisture content in materials: • New facility at NPL (UK) • INRIM (Italy) investigating traceability of moisture content • in wood

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