Difference between Humidity and Relative Humidity.

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Difference between Humidity and Relative Humidity.

📌 Difference between Humidity and Relative Humidity

1. Humidity

  • Definition: The amount of water vapor present in the air at a given time.

  • Measurement: Usually expressed in grams of water vapor per cubic meter of air (g/m³).

  • Type: Known as Absolute Humidity.

  • Limitation: Does not account for temperature — it only tells how much water vapor is present, not how close the air is to being saturated.


2. Relative Humidity (RH)

  • Definition: The ratio of the actual amount of water vapor present in the air to the maximum amount the air can hold at that temperature, expressed as a percentage.

  • Formula:

    RH(%)=Actual Vapor PressureSaturation Vapor Pressure at that Temperature×100RH (\%) = \frac{\text{Actual Vapor Pressure}}{\text{Saturation Vapor Pressure at that Temperature}} \times 100

  • Example:

    • If RH = 50%, the air holds half the moisture it could hold at that temperature.

    • At RH = 100%, the air is fully saturated → condensation/rainfall occurs.

  • Application: More practical in pharma cleanrooms, warehouses, and stability chambers where both moisture and temperature matter.


✅ Key Difference in One Line

  • Humidity = actual water vapor content (absolute measure).

  • Relative Humidity = water vapor content relative to maximum capacity at a given temperature (percentage).

 

 

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