Increase humidity with HRV

heatinghumidifierhumidityhvacwinter

I’d like to increase the humidity levels in my old stone and brick house (~120 years) during the winter. Right now it’s about mid-20% and I’d like it to be 30% to 35%.

This house came with a HRV system system that I understand brings outdoor air into the house. Considering that it’s usually more than 50% RH outside, I am curious why running the system seems to dehumidify the house and make my problem worse rather than improve things. I understand that the water-carrying capacity of cold air is less than warm air, so why would bringing in 50% RH cold air into a warm space of 20% RH not increase the indoor RH? Is there something else possibly wrong that I should investigate?

Bonus details for those curious:

The house came with an evaporative flow-through bypass humidifier that pours about $25 to $60 of water down the drain each month while also not affecting the humidity. My current working strategy is run a large console humidifier next to a large return near the furnace – with this setup I can crank the house up to 40% RH easily but it requires filling up the water tanks every day or so, which isn’t sustainable while I’m away. Coming up with a better way using the HRV would be neat.

Best Answer

Ah, I think I’ve found the answer:

Admitting cold outdoor air into a space will lower the indoor RH. When the lower temperature outdoor air is brought indoors and heated, it loses moisture and reduces the overall RH.

For example: if the outdoor temperature is 0°F and 50% RH and the air comes indoors and is heated to 70°F, the residual moisture after heating the outdoor air will only be about 3% RH. Even on a nice, sunny 35°F and 50% RH day, the residual indoor RH will only be about 14%.

So by heating the cold, high-RH outdoor air up, the RH content drops tremendously. By introducing this extremely low-RH air into the house, you can expect the indoor RH to plummet.