Gauge vs absolute pressure (psig vs psia)

Many pressure readings in HVAC and automotive A/C are reported as gauge pressure (psig, barg, kPa(g)), but most thermodynamic property correlations (including CoolProp) require absolute pressure (psia, bar(a), kPa(a)). Mixing them up is one of the most common reasons PT charts and saturation calculations look “wrong”.

Definitions

Gauge pressure is measured relative to the local atmosphere. Absolute pressure is measured relative to a perfect vacuum.

Pabs = Pgauge + Patm
Pgauge = Pabs − Patm

Common unit labels

Why properties use absolute pressure

A quick mental check

At standard sea-level conditions, atmospheric pressure is about 101.3 kPa (≈ 1.013 bar, ≈ 14.7 psi). That means:

Because Patm varies with altitude and weather, you should convert using a local barometric value whenever precision matters.

Using FluidTool correctly

FluidTool uses absolute pressure for calculations (Pa, kPa, bar, MPa, psi). If your instrument shows gauge pressure, convert it to absolute first.

For PT-chart style lookups, use a Two-phase input pair such as T + Q or P + Q. For supercritical/transcritical cases (e.g., CO2 high side), use P + T instead of assuming saturation.

What this page is NOT

This page explains pressure definitions only. It does not provide “normal operating pressure” targets, charging advice, retrofit guidance, or service procedures.