Title: Lab 7: Measurement of Vapor Conductance
1Lab 7 Measurement of Vapor Conductance
- Last week we measured heat conductance
- We intuitively understand heat flux
- This week we measure another common flux
- Water vapor flux
- Major means of energy exchange in some
environments (latent heat of vaporization) - Dealt with all the time
- Cooling after a swim
- Transpiration from a leaf surface
2Vapor conductance from an animal or plant
- Again, flux is driven by a concentration
difference and limited by a conductance to water
vapor
E evaporation (mol m-2 s-1) gv vapor
conductance (mol m-2 s-1) Cv vapor mol fraction
(mol H2O/mol air)
3Free water in tissue is limited in movement by
barriers Diffusion or convection of vapor in
boundary layer Cuticle or skin at surface
Subscripts t, s, and a are tissue, surface, and
air
4Evaporation from an animal or plant
How can we estimate Cvt?
5gva - estimating from theoretical values
k is now 0.147 (not the 0.135 for
heat) Estimation is not very accurate
6gva- measuring from complex shapes
- Where is the difficulty
- Calculations of gva from fluid dynamics theory
lack precision - Complex shapes are difficult to find a
characteristic dimension for - Also, it may be hard to calculate the wind speed
(e.g. in canopy) - Solution build physical model
- keep surface wet. Why?
- measure water loss over time (evaporation)
7Model of old system
gvs
gva
Cvs
Cvt
Cva
8Model of new system
- If we keep surface wet
- Reduce rvs to zero (gvs 8)
- Cvs es(Tsurface)
9gva-measuring from complex shapes
(simplified with assumptions from previous slide)
- What do we need to know to calculate gva?
- Evaporation - weighing or reservoir
- Cvs surface is wet, es(Ts)
- Cva measure ea
10Example If a 0.01 m2 Plaster of Paris frog was
at 20o C, ea 1 kPa and it lost 1.2 gH2O in 1 h.
What is the boundary layer conductance gva?
11Now lets look at gvs
Cvt es(Ttissue) Cva youd better know how to
measure this! gva we can estimate from theory
or measure (previous slide) gvs ??
12gvs - weighing method
- Not practical to calculate surface conductance
- Incomplete theory
- Measure gvs by creating system where we know all
of the other parameters - E mass of water lost over time period (obtain
by weighing)/surface area of object - Cva measure with psychrometer, etc.
- Cvt es(Tobject)
- What can we do to make rva 0 (gva 8)???
13Governing equation and model of overall system
What happens if gva becomes very large?
14Simplified system
gvs
Cvs Cva if gva is large
Cvt
15gvs direct measurement with diffusion porometers
- Three types
- Dynamic Porometer
- Delta-T Devices, UK
- Measures time it takes to increase humidity 5
- Null Balance Porometer
- Li-COR (discontinued)
- Measures increase in humidity over dry air
- Steady State Porometer
- Decagon
- Uses known conductances in series with gvs to
measure gvs
16LI-COR Null Balance Porometer
17Using null balance porometer to find gvs
combine
f is flow rate over leaf Cva is vapor mole
fraction coming out of cuvette Cva(in) is vapor
mole fraction coming into cuvette (0) A is
surface area of cuvette
18Delta T dynamic porometer
Increase in vapor concentration over time in
chamber is proportional to stomatal conductance
19Decagon Steady State Porometer
20Using steady state porometer to measure gvs
gd1 and gd2 are strictly a function of the
distance between the two measurements
21Todays lab
- Measure gva from an evaporating surface at three
wind speeds - Keep surface wet so gvs is infinity
- Get E by measuring water volume pulled from
reservoir - Compare gva measured to gva theoretical
- Measure gvs of plant leaves with diffusion
porometer(s) - Look at environmental effects on gvs
- Calculate gvs from given situation