Moisture performance of leaky exterior walls with added insulation
Desmarais, G., D. Derome and P. Fazio
2001 Envelope VIII Conference, Clearwater, Fl, ASHRAE, Dec
Desmarais, G., D. Derome and P. Fazio, (2001), "Moisture performance of leaky exterior walls with added insulation", Envelope VIII Conference, Clearwater, Fl, ASHRAE, Dec.
Abstract: |
Adding insulation to existing exterior walls has the potential to create moisture related problems as moisture from indoor gets into moderately leaky building envelopes. A test was designed to investigate the behaviour of exterior walls with and without added insulation and having different leakage characteristics.
Nine wall assemblies, included within a full-scale test hut, were subjected consecutively to winter and late spring weather conditions. All specimens had glass fiber batt insulation between the studs. In three of the specimens, extruded polystyrene board were added on the cold side of the assembly, and in two specimens insulation was added on the warm side. These three compositions were studied with various air leakage paths: a long path, a concentrated path, and a uniformly distributed exfiltration path.
Moisture content in the fiberboard sheathing and wood studs measured throughout the test are compared to demonstrate the influence of location of insulation and geometry of air leakage. The results show that walls having the same R-value but a different composition do not necessarily behave the same way. Depending on the position of the added insulation and its properties, the sensitivity to air leakage will vary. It is also shown that air leakage should be taken into account before increasing the thermal resistance of existing exterior walls. |
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Related Concepts
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Related Resources:
- ASHRAE-American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning Engineers
"the sole purpose of advancing the arts and sciences of heating, ventilation, air conditioning and refrigeration for the public's benefit through research, standards writing, continuing education and publications."
- BCE--Dept. of Building, Civil and Environmental Engineering
"The programs offered include the following: B.Eng. (Bldg.) and B.Eng. (Civil). M.Eng., M.A.Sc., and Ph.D., and graduate certificates. "
- Concordia University
"Real Education for the Real People" (How about that!)
- Environmental chamber of BCEE Concordia
A multi-purpose building envelope test facility that can host full-scale wall specimens, at Centre for Building Studies, Concordia University
- Environmental Chamber at Concordia
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