Once bulk water has been physically removed, the IICRC WRT body of knowledge identifies therate of evaporationas the most significant factor influencing drying time. Evaporation is the process by which remaining moisture within materials changes from liquid to vapor and enters the surrounding air.
The WRT curriculum explains that evaporation is controlled by several interrelated variables, including vapor pressure differential, airflow across wet surfaces, surface temperature, and ambient humidity conditions. If evaporation is slow, drying time increases regardless of how effective extraction was initially.
While extraction method plays a critical role in reducing the initial moisture load, it does not control the drying phase once free water has been removed. Similarly, fiber saturation point describes moisture conditions within materials but does not dictate drying speed. Condensation, conversely, inhibits drying and adds moisture.
The WRT body of knowledge reinforces that successful drying requires creating conditions that maximize evaporation while simultaneously removing evaporated moisture through dehumidification or ventilation. Monitoring evaporation effectiveness is therefore a core responsibility of the restorer during daily inspections.