Insulation Overview

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Transcript Insulation Overview

Insulation Overview

** Not for Distribution Outside NSF/UL 440 ** Stan Wolfersberger August 2013

Insulation Overview for NSF/UL 440

Start with some basics:What insulation products doTypes of insulationPerformance expectations for insulationWhere insulation is used in buildingsInsulation and Emissions: It Gets ComplicatedHow a packed wall cavity behaves differently than insulation in a

dynamic chamber

Thermal insulation, a temperature gradient is almost always

present

Most insulation products are installed behind other productsSimple models do not reflect in-use reality in most cases

What Insulation Products Do

Thermal insulation is critical component for energy-efficient

buildings of all types (walls, ceiling/roof, slab, foundations, etc. etc.).

From NAIMA website, “The definition of “insulate” as it

relates to the flow of heat in homes, buildings and processes means to slow or retard the flow of heat from warmer to colder areas. This happens by surrounding the area with a material with low thermal conductance – such as thermal insulation.”

Building code often mandates the minimum required levels

of thermal insulation

Note that adoption of the model energy code by states & local

governments may lag by several years from the most current edition for Residential structures.

What Insulation Products Do

Besides the “typical” thermal insulation uses in

buildings, commercial/industrial applications can include high-temperature equipment insulation, cryogenic equipment insulation, and so on.

Acoustical applications of insulation are also

widespread; most thermal insulation types also offer acoustic benefits.

Certain types of insulation may be used as fire blocking,

fire safing, etc.

Insulation can provide condensation control.Some types of insulation may be effective air barriers.

Types of Insulation

Fibrous glass, mineral wool (rock wool, slag wool)Cellulosic materialsRigid foams (Expanded Polystyrene, Extruded Polystyrene,

Polyisocyanurate, Polyurethane, etc.)

Flexible foams (Polyethylene, etc.)Spray foams (spray-in-place foams dominated by spray

polyurethane foams, can be open or closed cell)

Other (foamed glass/cellular glass, aerogels, perlite, vacuum

panels, etc.)

Performance Expectations for Insulation Construction and Manufactured Housing – ASTM C665, Mineral Fiber Blanket Thermal Insulation for Light Frame

Includes the following material property requirements:Thermal resistance (thermal conductivity aka R value)Surface burning characteristics (flame spread and smoke

developed)

Critical radiant flux (critical radiant flux-flame propagation

resistance)

Water Vapor Permeance (for products faced with a vapor

barrier)

Water Vapor SorptionOdor EmissionCorrosiveness (steel, copper, aluminum)Fungi Resistance (5 strains of fungus, compared to white birch

or southern pine control)

Other Expectations – Batt Insulation Example

Contractor and installer requirements can include:Low dustStiffness of battsQuick recovery to label thickness after opening compressed

packages

Parting strengthValue (Cost $$ vs. Benefit)Federal Trade Commission, “Labeling and Advertising of

Home Insulation: Trade Regulation Rule”, 16 CFR Part 460, covers R-value tolerances, acceptable test methods for R value, product labeling, etc.

Each Type of Insulation Typically Has its Own Consensus Standard of Required Properties

ASTM C739, Cellulosic Fiber Loose-Fill

Thermal Insulation

ASTM C1289, Faced Rigid Cellular

Polyisocyanurate Thermal Insulation Board

ASTM C578, Rigid, Cellular Polystyrene

Thermal Insulation

ASTM C1029, Spray-Applied Rigid Cellular

Polyurethane Foam Thermal Insulation

Commercial Buildings & Insulation

Single-Family House & Insulation

Insulation in Wall Cavities

Insulation Behavior in a Wall Cavity – Static Chamber Tests Give Insight

Explore Loading Impact on Product Emissions with Static Chamber Tests

Typical Data – Emissions Go Down as Loading Goes Up (Formaldehyde, Desiccator Test)

Product A (~ 9:1 ratio from low to high loading results)

Loading, m2/m3

0.49

1.78

2.83

Product B (~ 3:1 ratio from low to high loading results) 0.49

1.78

2.83

Emissions, ug/m2-hr

93.1

24.8

10.6

68.2

30.5

27.2

Understanding the Loading Effect

Loading Effect Has Also Been Observed in Dynamic Chamber Tests

Work done at Oak Ridge National Laboratory for CPSC by

Matthews and Westley (see “References – Insulation and Related Products SJW 2013”).

Also see work by Pickrell, et al. for CPSC, both static

chamber and dynamic chamber tests. This includes the impact of testing products together. Loading impact studied for wood products in static chamber tests (see “References – Insulation and Related Products SJW 2013”).

Thermal Insulation – Almost Always a Temperature Gradient Across Product

Most Insulation Products Are Not Directly Exposed – Behind Other Products

Some “System” tests have been run, but they over-simply real-life situation

Simulated wall stud cavity tests, with

metal or wood studs, insulation, with/without drywall, vapor barrier, paint using dynamic chambers.

These tests show that having products

over the insulation reduces emissions.

However, there was no temperature

gradient, no path for emissions to go “outside” vs. in, no differential pressure driving force, etc.

Trying to simulate actual in-use

emissions would overly complicate the test procedure.

Understand the Limitations of the Simple Models – Outside the Building Interior, They May Not Reflect Reality

Vapor Barriers May be Integral Components of Installed Insulation

Pipe insulation exampleManufacturers provide

accessory sealing tapes, butt strips, mastic, etc. so the insulation system is protected by a vapor barrier

Such products may need

more specific sample prep/testing instructions if dynamic chamber tests are to be representative of installed products .

Some Key Take-Aways - Insulation

Dynamic chamber testing can be used to determine emissions from

insulation products; however, the simple models in use are generally overly conservative and do not reflect in-use dynamics.

Once you go outside the interior space, application of simple

models may produce misleading predictions of indoor air quality impact of products like insulation.

When there are multiple models which differ in modeling

assumptions, then the required emissions for insulation can differ (see my previous examples from CA SM V1.1 for E&P TG meeting).

Simple model(s) are Ok for taking dynamic chamber emissions

results and producing predicted air concentrations to see if a product meets low-emitting criteria. But keep in mind their purpose – to compare products, not to predict actual VOC concentrations inside a real building.

Additional Sources of Information

Trade AssociationsNorth American Insulation Manufacturers OrganizationCellulose Insulation Manufacturers OrganizationExtruded Polystyrene Foam AssociationSpray Polyurethane Foam AllianceExpanded Polystyrene Industry AllianceBuilding ScienceManufacturer’s or Trade Association websitesBuilding Science Consultants, Researchers including U.S. National

Labs such as Oak Ridge, Berkeley, as well as private and non-U.S. labs (Building Science Corp; Fraunhofer Institute for Building Physics; etc.) as well as organizations such as The Energy & Environmental Building Alliance.

Thank You!

Any Questions???

*** Reminder, not for distribution outside NSF/UL 440 ***