Set indoor humidity targets for safer concrete curing. Estimate dehumidification needs for enclosed work zones. Plan drying timelines accurately using quick, verified psychrometrics today.
| Scenario | Indoor | Target | Volume | ACH | Duration | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Basement slab cure | 22°C, 70% RH | 55% RH | 240 m³ | 0.3 | 24 h | Reduce condensation risk during curing |
| Painted corridor | 24°C, 60% RH | 45% RH | 420 m³ | 0.7 | 10 h | Support coating dry-to-touch timelines |
| Flooring installation bay | 26°C, 58% RH | 50% RH | 650 m³ | 0.5 | 12 h | Stabilize RH before adhesive work |
| Moisture-sensitive storage | 20°C, 55% RH | 40% RH | 180 m³ | 0.2 | 48 h | Lower RH for packaging protection |
Controlled RH supports predictable curing, drying, and finish quality. Concrete placements commonly benefit from stable conditions to reduce surface dusting and minimize condensation on steel and formwork. Use the calculator to compare your measured RH against a project limit, then quantify the moisture change needed to reach that limit. Converting results to liters helps translate psychrometric values into dehumidifier or humidifier workload.
The “Initial adjustment” estimates the one-time moisture shift needed to move from current RH to the target at a fixed temperature. “Total moisture control” adds duration and, if selected, a ventilation load. Positive ventilation impact means outside air introduces moisture above the target, increasing removal demand. Negative impact indicates drier outdoor air that can assist drying.
Air changes per hour (ACH) combines mechanical ventilation and envelope leakage. Small increases in ACH can materially change moisture load in large zones, especially when outdoor humidity is high. For enclosed work areas, document the expected ACH from temporary openings, door cycles, and fan setups. If weather shifts, re-run the calculation with new outdoor RH and temperature to maintain compliance and avoid surprises.
Dew point is a practical indicator for condensation on cool surfaces. When surface temperature approaches dew point, moisture can form on slabs, equipment, or stored materials. The calculator reports current and target dew points to help align controls with site conditions. Lowering RH reduces dew point and typically reduces condensation risk on chilled water lines, night-cooled walls, and metal framing.
Exported CSV and PDF files support daily logs, inspection packages, and subcontractor coordination for teams. Capture indoor readings at consistent locations and times, then attach the report to curing plans, flooring acclimation records, or coating manufacturer documentation. Use the log table to store multiple runs and export one file summarizing conditions, targets, and control rates.
Start with manufacturer requirements and project specifications. Flooring, coatings, and adhesives often specify RH ranges. Choose a target that meets the strictest requirement for the space, then confirm temperature stability to keep RH meaningful.
RH depends on temperature because warm air holds more moisture. If temperature rises, RH can drop without removing water. Keep temperature steady during measurement and control so the calculated moisture change matches real site performance.
Use length × width × average height for the enclosed zone. For stepped ceilings, split the area into simple blocks, calculate each volume, and add them. Accurate volume improves the dry-air mass estimate and moisture control plan.
Use equipment schedules, temporary ventilation rates, and observed leakage. If you lack data, start with 0.3–1.0 ACH for enclosed spaces and refine after smoke tests or airflow readings. Recalculate when openings or fan setups change.
It provides a moisture removal rate in liters per hour as a planning value. Match that rate to dehumidifier rated capacity, then apply safety factors for temperature swings, wet materials, and intermittent door openings.
Yes. If outdoor humidity ratio is below the target condition, ventilation can reduce indoor moisture. However, ensure temperature and dust control remain acceptable, and avoid over-ventilating when outdoor conditions fluctuate or introduce contaminants.
Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.