“…Environmental chambers (also termed climate or climatic chambers) enabling temperature and relative humidity regulation during laboratory experiments are required in a range of disciplines, including ecology, geology, and hydrology. They are, for example, used to study salt weathering of rocks (Goudie & Parker, 1998), nutrient leaching in soils (Grant, Macrae, Rezanezhad, & Lam, 2019), and water repellency of soils (Jiménez‐Pinilla et al., 2016), or in evaporation studies (Huang, Bruch, & Barbour, 2013; Merz et al., 2018; Qazi, Bonn, & Shahidzadeh, 2018; Shokri‐Kuehni, Norouzi Rad, Webb, & Shokri, 2017; Song, Cui, Tang, Ding, & Tran, 2014). Moreover, environmental chambers serve to test monitoring equipment (Papapostolou, Zhang, Feenstra, & Polidori, 2017; Prechsl, Gilgen, Kahmen, & Buchmann, 2014; Windhorst, Waltz, Timbe, Frede, & Breuer, 2013).…”