logo
Why your clothes are drying faster in the cold weather

Why your clothes are drying faster in the cold weather

It has been a frosty start to winter, but for many areas of Australia, the lower temperatures are coinciding with faster drying clothes.
This sounds like a fallacy since drying relies on evaporation, and the warmer it is the faster moisture in your clothes converts to a gas and escapes.
For southern and central Australia, drying is generally — but not always — faster in summer.
However, the difference is often minimal across eastern states and conditions this week in coastal regions like Sydney and Brisbane, despite cold temperatures, have been optimal for washing productivity.
So how can laundry times be shorter when the weather is cooler?
The answer can be found in the details of the drying process.
Firstly, while higher temperatures lead to faster evaporation, even in air below freezing, some molecules of water can still break free and convert into a gas.
However, what is critical for efficient drying is not just evaporation, but more specifically the rate of evaporation (moisture leaving your clothes) relative to the rate of condensation (moisture arriving on your clothes).
Despite the intuition that your laundry will dry faster in hot weather, surprisingly, science tells us the air temperature is the least important variable in determining drying times.
The two most important factors are fairly obvious — that it is not raining and the sun is shining.
Direct sunlight supplies far more energy compared to what is emitted from the ground or the air, which is why bitumen and car seatbelt buckles get so hot.
The next three factors, in order of importance, account for remaining day-to-day drying variability:
From this hierarchy, humidity is more important than wind and temperature, and that is because the moisture in your clothes has to evaporate into the air — and the process is far more efficient when humidity is low.
If the surrounding air is saturated with moisture (high humidity), condensation back onto your clothes will negate evaporation.
This is the same reason why it feels hotter when it is humid, as evaporation of your sweat is restricted and therefore less cooling occurs through the absorption of latent heat.
Next comes wind. On a still day, a slim layer of air around your clothes will become humid due to the evaporation, which reverts us to the saturated air-drying issue.
On a windy day, though, the water vapour from your laundry is blown away and continuously replaced by unsaturated air. This is why hair dryers have a fan.
And finally, the last and the least variable is temperature, which also affects drying times but to a lesser degree than wind and humidity.
Based on the above, let's compare drying times between a typical humid, summer day and the wintry, dry weather seen this week along parts of the east coast.
The results, calculated from an online calculator based off a thick garment with 4-millimetre fabric thickness, revealed a considerable improvement in drying under the cool scenario — even with only a 5 -kilometre-per-hour increase in the wind speed.
So what comes out in the wash is do not let the winter cold stop you from hanging out your washing — just time your laundry to coincide with days of lower humidity and sufficient wind.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Essendon v Geelong LIVE: Bombers, Cats face off at the MCG as Saturday AFL action continues
Essendon v Geelong LIVE: Bombers, Cats face off at the MCG as Saturday AFL action continues

The Age

time6 hours ago

  • The Age

Essendon v Geelong LIVE: Bombers, Cats face off at the MCG as Saturday AFL action continues

Latest posts 3.45pm Matthews says Tasmanian dew adds to roof argument By Jon Pierik AFL great Leigh Matthews says Friday night's clash in Launceston was a poor spectacle because of heavy dew and reinforced why a new stadium in Hobart needs to have a roof. Hawthorn defeated Adelaide by three points in a cliffhanger in the first Friday night game at UTAS Stadium, but there were only 11 combined goals between the sides in conditions where it was, at times, difficult to handle the ball. A vote on a new $975 million, 23,000-seat stadium at Macquarie Point in Hobart has been delayed because of a snap state election on July 19, but Matthews says – should it go ahead – it must have a roof. Launceston games are usually played on a Saturday or Sunday afternoon, but the Hawks' game against the Crows was played under lights on Friday night, which brought the dew into play. Where does your club rank on wins against top eight sides? 3.44pm Good afternoon G'day everyone and welcome to our AFL Saturday live blog. I'm Roy Ward and I'll be tapping the keys today and tonight as we follow Essendon vs Geelong at 4.15pm AEST and then North Melbourne vs Fremantle at 7.35pm AEST. We will also cover off on the result and reactions from the Brisbane vs GWS Giants clash in Brisbane.

Flood-affected Ingham pleas for help as housing crisis worsens
Flood-affected Ingham pleas for help as housing crisis worsens

ABC News

time12 hours ago

  • ABC News

Flood-affected Ingham pleas for help as housing crisis worsens

Karen Thomas is packing up precious memories and the few belongings she has left as she prepares to leave her beloved community of Ingham. Ms Thomas hasn't been able to find any permanent housing since floods inundated her rental property in February. Community advocates say she's not alone. Residents in the flood-stricken Queensland town say they are being forced to leave due to a worsening housing crisis. Ms Thomas has not only lost her home in Ingham, she has lost her community. The floods came just after her daughter, Jody Davies, died from suicide in September. In the months after Jody's death, volunteering at the local community hub had given Ms Thomas meaning and purpose in her life. Then the floods hit. "All my baby photos, all my photos, I lost … I opened the box up and they were all destroyed, so I had to throw them out." Ms Thomas had no formal rental agreement for the flood-damaged property, and was not able to return to live there. She found temporary accommodation for a while, but that property has now been sold. Ms Thomas is moving to Townsville, more than 100 kilometres south, where she can stay with family. "I'm going to live with my grandchildren in a little room, until hopefully I can come back to Ingham," she said. The Hinchinbrook Community Support Centre's Quinta Lahtinen said Ms Thomas's circumstances were not said she had seen many people who were living in precarious housing situations as a result of the floods. When the flood hit Ingham, which has a population of about 4,500, it destroyed or badly damaged more than 200 houses. "Quite a number of our community are moving out of the district, because of the housing crisis," Ms Lahtinen said. "We're seeing a lot of people living in cars and vans. "We're seeing really significant overcrowding issues with families, and lots of couch surfing." Veteran real estate agent Felix Reitano said rental listings were few and far between "even before the floods", but the lack of available housing was worse now. "People [were] attracted to the town because of relatively low prices and its proximity to Townsville," he said. Mr Reitano said it was disheartening to have to turn good tenants away because there wasn't enough stock. "It's very embarrassing as a real estate agent when you can't place a good tenant in a house, where we would like to retain them as a tenant." He said businesses were slowly getting back on track, but skills shortages meant repair work was taking longer than it otherwise would. Hinchinbrook deputy mayor Mary Brown spearheaded recovery efforts after the floods. Ms Brown said the shire was continuing to advocate for an increase in housing supply. "That's not a quick process," she said. "The town looks lovely, a lot of the debris has been cleaned up, and things look like they're getting back to normal — and in a lot of ways they are. For Ms Thomas, a supply of more homes to ease the housing crisis can't come soon enough. "If the government put 100 dongas up on a piece of land, just for a year or so, people [would] get somewhere to live, and settle [while] the houses get fixed up, " she said. "If there's a place to rent, it's gone in five seconds. There's really nothing in this town.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store