q = ε e/p
Here ε = 0.622 is the ratio of the molecular weight of water vapour (18) to the molecular weight of "dry air" (a mixture principally of N2 and O2, with M.W. 28.95). And e is the vapour pressure (defined below) and p is the total pressure.
A special concept is that of the "saturation" or "equilibrium" vapour pressure, e*. At any temperature T, a beaker containing liquid and vapour will come to an equilibrium vapour pressure such that there is a balance between the rate of vapourisation of liquid and the rate of condensation of vapour, thus we write e*=e*(T), meaning, e* is a function of T. See reference books for Tables.
The ideal gas law relates e to ρv
e [Pa] = ρv [kg m-3] Rv [J kg-1 K-1] T [K]
where Rv is the specific gas constant for water vapour, Rv= 462 [J kg-1 K-1].
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