Evaporation Rate Water Calculator
Estimated Evaporation Rate
Daily Evaporation: liters/day
How to Use the Water Evaporation Rate Calculator
A Water Evaporation Rate Calculator estimates how much water will evaporate from a given surface area per day based on temperature, humidity, and wind speed.
What It Does:
This tool uses a simplified empirical formula to help estimate daily water loss (in liters/day) from surfaces like pools, tanks, or reservoirs under typical environmental conditions.
Inputs Required:
- Surface Area (m²): Total exposed area of the water body.
- Air Temperature (°C): Ambient air temperature.
- Relative Humidity (%): Current atmospheric humidity (0–100%).
- Wind Speed (m/s): Wind velocity across the water surface.
Steps to Use:
- Enter the water surface area in square meters.
- Input the temperature, humidity, and wind speed.
- Click “Calculate Evaporation Rate”.
- The calculator displays daily water loss in liters.
This is particularly useful for:
- Gardeners managing irrigation
- Pool owners estimate refill schedules
- Engineers planning reservoir maintenance
- Researchers modeling water resource loss
Evaporation Rate Calculator FAQ
Q1: How accurate is this evaporation rate?
A: The result is an approximation using a simplified formula. Real-world conditions like solar radiation, shading, and pressure changes may affect accuracy.
Q2: What is the formula being used?
A: The calculator uses a modified version of an empirical equation:Evap Rate (m/day) = 0.1 × (25 + T) × (100 − RH) × (1 + 0.1 × Wind) / 10,000
Q3: Why is the result in liters/day?
A: It's a familiar unit and easier to apply for tasks like estimating refilling needs or water conservation planning.
Q4: Can this be used for indoor evaporation (e.g. humidifiers)?
A: Not reliably. Indoor environments have controlled factors and typically require more detailed psychrometric data.
Q5: Is wind speed important?
A: Yes. Wind increases evaporation by carrying away saturated air, allowing more moisture to escape.
Q6: Does it consider solar radiation?
A: Not directly. This version assumes a general average outdoor environment. For solar-specific impact, advanced models or sensors are needed.