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|100ºF || 0.08"/day | |100ºF || 0.08"/day | ||
|} | |} | ||
+ | |||
+ | These tables illustrate that as: | ||
+ | *wind on the water surface increases, evaporation increases | ||
+ | *water temperature increases, evaporation increases | ||
+ | *relative humidity decreases, evaporation increases | ||
+ | *air temperature decreases, evaporation increases. |
Revision as of 03:55, 8 December 2019
Swimming Pool Evaporation: A Guide to Prevention
It comes as no surprise that pool leaks are a significant cause of water loss in your swimming pool. What you may be surprised at, though, is that while leaks are a major cause, they are not the number one cause. That honor goes to water evaporation.
You can lose 1/2" to 3/4" of water a day due to evaporation. The greatest evaporation rate can be in May and Sept/Oct in North America, when pool water can be in the 80's during the day and overnight air temps drop into the 70's.
According to the Department of Energy[1], swimming pools and spas lose up to 70% of water through evaporation. Leaks follow behind as the number two reason for water loss. For the purpose of water evaporation, let's examine possible reasons why this may be happening to your pool or spa.
Water loss through evaporation
We all know that evaporation is simply the process of liquid turning into vapor. When you see fog rising from your warm pool on cold mornings that is visible evaporation happening. So how does that make a difference for swimming pools? Well, evaporation occurs each time your pool is exposed to wind or air at the surface. In short, this is pretty much all the time, in every pool. Water at the surface will form into a vapor. Eventually, this vapor is released into the air.
Interestingly enough, it isn't even day time that you can lose the most heat. Heated pools on cool nights will experience evaporation more rapidly. This explains why most of a heated pool's heat is lost overnight. There are ways to fight evaporation, though.
Pools and Spas love to be covered when not in use
The best way to prevent evaporation is as easy as buying a pool or spa cover. Pool covers can actually reduce evaporation by up to 95%[2]. That alone should be enough proof to get you to consider purchasing one if you haven't already. Aside from the water savings, there are other benefits to owning a pool cover.
Pool covers also keep and maintain pool warmth inside your pool. Remember earlier in the article; we mentioned losing heat in heated pools without a cover? Well, the cover will trap the heat inside the pool and reduce the energy usage of your heater. Your new pool cover can lower your Free Chlorine loss, reduce pool debris, and possibly let you reduce the amount of time your pump and filter needs to run.
Water features need downtime as well
Cool water features like the waterfalls and jets are great and make a beautiful accent to your pool, but turning them off will help prevent evaporation as well as reduce the pH rise they cause. Laminar jets and cascading waterfalls are the two big ones having the highest chance of contributing to water evaporation. It is recommended to turn them off when not in use. This will save you on water and chemicals anyway, and when you've got guests coming over, turn them on and have a great time.
Reduce your water temperature
You most likely have heard that warmer water evaporates faster than cooler water since the warmer water has more kinetic energy to change state from a liquid to a gas. Well, as air temperatures drop, such as in cold nights, the difference in energy between the cold air and the warm pool water is greater and the warm water evaporation will increase.
The closer the water temperature is to the air temperature the less evaporation you will have, so keep this in mind and lower the thermostat on the pool heater, if your goal is to prevent evaporation and want to save money on water.
Add windbreaks around the pool
Surprisingly, wind on the surface of the water can cause more evaporation then the other factors discussed.
Some of the strongest and most intense wind in the country can be found in mountainous regions. The wind will undoubtedly have an effect on pool water, as wind can blow water particles and cause speedy evaporation. Other windy regions include the Great Plains, the Great Lakes and most coastal locations.
In windy areas the wind along the surface of the water can be causing the majority of the evaporation. A pool cover, landscaping, fences, or hedges can reduce the wind speed that hits the water surface.
Signs you may be losing water to evaporation
If your pool is only losing water in cooler months it is likely evaporation due to the temperature differential between the water and the air as discussed above. We often see members thinking their pool sprung a leak when evaporation increases as the seasons change.
One way to be sure to test if you're losing water to evaporation (or a leak actually as well) is to perform a water bucket test. Follow a structured approach to leak detection as described in the TFP Leak Detection article in Pool School. The bucket test as described in that article should be your first step to determine if water loss is from evaporation or a leak.
Pool Water Evaporation Rates
This Water Evaporation spreadsheet will calculate the evaporation rate given air and water temperature, relative humidity, and wind. Note that this is the wind speed at the surface of the water which is usually quite a bit lower than general wind speed due to fences and the water being somewhat below ground level.[3]
To use the spreadsheet you enter Water Temperature in Celsius, Relative Humidity of Air, and Wind in MPH and the evaporation in in/hr and in/day is calculated.
As described above, wind is a huge factor in pool water evaporation. Relative humidity is another factor where you won't get evaporation when it's near 100% while in dry low humidity climates such as desert areas you get more evaporation. Water temperature is also a factor.[4]
The following tables show how these factors come into play starting with a baseline of 85ºF water temperature, 80ºF air temperature, 50% relative humidity, and no wind at the pool's surface.
0 MPH | 0.21"/day |
1 MPH | 0.31"/day |
2 MPH | 0.40"/day |
3 MPH | 0.50"/day |
5 MPH | 0.69"/day |
7 MPH | 0.88"/day |
10 MPH | 1.17"/day |
70ºF | 0.07"/day |
75ºF | 0.11"/day |
80ºF | 0.16"/day |
85ºF | 0.21"/day |
90ºF | 0.28"/day |
95ºF | 0.35"/day |
100ºF | 0.44"/day |
105ºF | 0.54"/day |
0% | 0.37"/day |
25% | 0.29"/day |
50% | 0.21"/day |
75% | 0.14"/day |
90% | 0.09"/day |
100% | 0.06"/day (evaporation still occurs in this case because air is cooler than water so is less than warm water vapor saturation; if the same temp then no evaporation) |
60ºF | 0.29"/day |
70ºF | 0.26"/day |
80ºF | 0.21"/day |
90ºF | 0.15"/day |
100ºF | 0.08"/day |
These tables illustrate that as:
- wind on the water surface increases, evaporation increases
- water temperature increases, evaporation increases
- relative humidity decreases, evaporation increases
- air temperature decreases, evaporation increases.