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"R" Fairy Tale: The Myth of Insulation Values One of the fairy tales
of our time is the "R-value." The "R-value" is touted to
the American consumer to the point where it has taken a "chiseled in
stone" status. The saddest part of the fairy tale is the R-value by
itself is almost a worthless number. It is impossible to
define an insulation with a single number. It is imperative we know more than
a single "R" number. So why do we allow the R-value fairy tale to
be perpetuated? I don't know. I don't know if anybody knows. It obviously
favors fiber insulation. Consider the R-value of an insulation after it has
been submersed in water or with a 20 mile per hour wind blowing through it.
Obviously the R-value of fiber insulations would go to zero. Under the same
conditions, the solid insulations would be largely unaffected. Again R-value
numbers are "funny" numbers. They are meaningless unless we know
other characteristics. None of us would ever
buy a piece of property if we knew only one dimension. Suppose someone
offered a property for $10,000 and told you it was a seven. You would
instantly wonder if that meant seven acres, seven square feet, seven miles
square, or what. You would want to know where it was -- in a swamp, on a
mountain, in downtown Dallas. In other words, one number cannot accurately
describe anything. The use of an R-value alone is absolutely ridiculous. Yet
we have Code bodies mandating R-values of 20's or 30's or 40's. A fiber
insulation having an R-value of 25 placed in a house not properly sealed will
allow the wind to blow through it as if there were no insulation. Maybe the
R-value is accurate in the tested material in the lab, but it is not even
remotely part of the real world. We must start asking for some additional
dimensions to our insulation. We need to know its resistance to air
penetration, to free water, and to vapor drive. What is the R-value after it
is subjected to real world conditions? The R-value is a
fictitious number supposed to indicate a material's ability to resist heat
loss. It is derived by taking the "k" value of a product and
dividing it into the number one. The "k" value is the actual
measurement of heat transferred through a specific material.
The test used to
produce the "k" value is an ASTM test. This ASTM test was designed
by a committee to give us measurement values that hopefully would be meaningful.
A major part of the problem lies in the design of the test. The test favors
the fiber insulations -- fiberglass, rock wool, and cellulose fiber. Very
little input went into the test for the solid insulations, such as foam
glass, cork, expanded polystyrene or urethane foam. The test does not
account for air movement (wind) or any amount of moisture (water vapor). In
other words, the test used to create the R-value is a test in non-real-world
conditions. For instance, fiberglass is generally assigned an R-value of
approximately 3.5. It will only achieve that R-value if tested in an absolute
zero wind and zero moisture environment. Zero wind and zero moisture are not
real-world. Our houses leak air, all our buildings leak air, and they often
leak water. Water vapor from the atmosphere, showers, cooking, breathing,
etc. constantly moves back and forth through the walls and ceilings. If an
attic is not properly ventilated, the water vapor from inside a house will
very quickly semi-saturate the insulation above the ceiling. Even small
amounts of moisture will cause a dramatic drop in fiber insulation's R-value
-- as much as 50 percent or more.
We are told, with very
good reason, that insulation should have a vapor barrier on the warm side.
Which is the warm side of the wall of a house? Obviously, it changes from
summer to winter -- even from day to night. If it is 20 F below zero outside,
the inside of an occupied house is certainly the warm side. During the summer
months, when the sun is shining, very obviously the warm side is the outside.
Sometimes the novice will try to put vapor barriers on both sides of the
insulation. Vapor barriers on both sides of fiber insulation generally prove
to be disastrous. It seems the vapor barriers will stop most of the moisture
but not all. Small amounts of moisture will move into the fiber insulation
between the two vapor barriers and be trapped. It will accumulate as the
temperature swings back and forth. This accumulation can become a huge
problem. We have re-insulated a number of potato storage's which originally
were insulated with fiberglass having a vapor barrier on both sides. Within a
year or two the insulation would completely fail to insulate. The moisture
would get trapped between the vapor barriers and saturate the fiberglass
insulation to the point of holding buckets of water. Fiber insulation needs
ventilation on one side; therefore, the vapor barrier should go on the side
where it will do the most good. |
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We understand air
penetration through the wall of the house. In some homes when the wind blows,
we often can feel it. But what most people, including many engineers, do not
realize is that there are very serious convection currents that occur within
the fiber insulations. These convection currents rotate vast amounts of air.
The air currents are not fast enough to feel or even measure with any but the
most sensitive instruments. Nevertheless, the air is constantly carrying heat
from the underside of the pile of fibers to the top side, letting it escape.
If we seal off the air movement, we generally seal in water vapor. The
additional water often will condense (this now becomes a source of water for
rotting of the structure). The water, as a vapor or condensation, will
seriously decrease the insulation value -- the R-value. The only way to deal
with a fiber insulation is to ventilate. But to ventilate means moving air
which also decreases the R-value.
The filter medium for
most furnace filters is fiberglass -- the same spun fiberglass used as
insulation. Fiberglass is used for an air filter because it has less
impedance to the air flow, and it is cheap. In other words, the air flows
through it very readily. It is ironic how we wrap our house in a furnace
filter that will strain the bugs out of the wind as it blows through the
house. There are tremendous air currents that blow through the walls of a
typical home. As a demonstration, hold a lit candle near an electrical outlet
on an outside wall when the wind is blowing. The average home with all its
doors and windows closed has a combination of air leaks equal to the size of
an open door. Even if we do a perfect job of installing the fiber insulation
in our house and bring the air infiltration very close to zero from one side
of the wall to the other, we still do not stop the air from moving through
the insulation itself vertically both in the ceiling and the walls. The best known solid
insulation is expanded polystyrene. Other solid insulations include cork,
foam glass and polyisocyanate or polyisocyanurate board stock. The latter two
being variations of urethane foam. Each of these insulations are ideally
suited for many uses. Foam glass has been used for years on hot and cold
tanks, especially in places where vapor drive is a problem. Cork is of course
a very old standby often used in freezer applications. EPS or expanded
polystyrene is seemingly used everywhere from throw away drinking cups and
food containers to perimeter foundation insulation, masonry insulations, and
more. Urethane board stock is becoming the standard for roof insulation,
especially for hot mopped roofs. It is also widely used for exterior
sheathing on many of the new houses. The R-value of the urethane board stock
is of course better than any of the other solid insulations. All of the solid
insulations will perform far better than fiber insulations whenever there is
wind or moisture involved. Most of the solid
insulations are placed as sheets or board stock. They suffer from one very
common problem. They generally don’t fit tight enough to prevent air
infiltration. It does not matters how thick these board stocks are if the wind
gets behind it. We see this often in masonry construction where board stock
is used between a brick and a block wall. Unless the board stock is actually
physically glued to the block wall air will infiltrate behind it. In this
case as the air flows through the weep holes in the brick and around the
insulation it is rendered virtually useless. Great care must be exercised in
placing the solid insulations. The brick ties need to be fitted at the joints
and then sealed to prevent air flow behind the insulation. The only commonly used
solid insulation that absolutely protects itself from air infiltration is the
spray-in-place polyurethane. When it is properly placed between two studs or
against the concrete block wall or wherever, the bonding of the spray plus
the expansion of the material in place will effect a total seal. This total
seal is almost impossible to overestimate. In my opinion most of the heat
loss in the walls of the home have to do with the seal rather than the
insulation. For physical reasons,
heat does not conduct horizontally nearly as well as it does vertically.
Therefore, if there were no insulation in the walls of the homes, but an
absolute airtight seal, there would not necessarily be a huge difference in
the heat loss. This would not be the case if the insulation was missing from
the ceiling. Air infiltration can most effectively be stopped with
spray-in-place polyurethane. It is the only material (properly applied) that
will fill in the corners, the cripples, the double studs, bottom plates, top
plates, etc. The R-value of a material is of no interest or consequence if
air can get past it.
During the 1970s my
firm insulated a bunch of new homes in the Snake River Valley of Idaho with
1.25 inches of spray-in-place polyurethane foam in the walls. In 1970 the
popular number for the R-value of one inch of urethane foam was 9.09 per
inch. Using this value, we were putting an R of 1.25 x 9.09 = 11.36 in the
walls. This was much less than the R = 16 claimed by the fiberglass insulators.
Today, using the charts from an ASHRAE book, we would only be able to claim
an R-value for the 1.25 inches of 7.5 to 9. Neither of these numbers make for
a very big R-value. The reality is that the people for whom we insulated
their homes invariably would thank us for the savings in their heat bills.
They would tell us their heating bill was half of their neighbor's. They felt
as if they saved the cost of the polyurethane in one, or at most two, years.
This is anecdotal evidence, I know, but anecdotal evidence is also compelling
and very real in our world. Most of these customers were savvy people. They
would not have paid the extra to get the urethane insulation if it had not
been better. |
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About mid 1975 I
received a call from a division manager of one of the major fiberglass
insulation manufacturers. The caller asked, "I understand that you are
spraying polyurethane in the walls of homes?" I told him that was true.
He was calling because we were cutting into the fiberglass insulation sales
in our area. He asked, "How can you do it?" I knew what he meant.
He wanted to know how I could look somebody in the eye and sell them a more
expensive insulation than the cheap old fiberglass. I told him the way I did
it is with a spray gun. Of course, that wasn't the answer he wanted. He
wanted to know how I could not feel guilty. I told him of insulating one of
two nearly identical houses built side by side. We insulated the walls of one
with 1.25 inches of urethane. The other house was insulated with full thick
fiberglass batts put in place by a reputable installer. Not only did we use
only 1.25 inches of urethane as the total wall insulation, but we had the
builder leave off the insulated sheathing. At the end of the first winter,
the urethane insulated home had a heating bill half of their neighbor's. I
know that is not terribly scientific, but it is very real. I am not sure he
was convinced, but it should be noted that same company jumped into the
urethane foam supply business the next year. One and a quarter inch
of polyurethane sprayed properly in the wall of a house will prevent more
heat loss than all the fiber insulation that can be crammed in the walls --
even up to an eight inch thickness. Not only does it provide better
insulation, but it provides significant additional strength to the house. One of my early clients
was Brent. I had insulated several potato storages for Brent. He knew what
spray-in-place urethane insulation could do. When he decided to build his
new, very large, very fancy new home, he asked me to come insulate it. I told
him I would be delighted. The builder pitched a fit. He "didn't need any
of that spray-in-place urethane in his buildings. He made his buildings
tight, and fiberglass was just as good." Brent explained to the
builder, "I know who is going to insulate the building. It is not as
definite as to who is going to be the contractor. You can make up your mind.
We are going to have the urethane insulation and you build the building, or
we are going to have the urethane insulation, and I will have someone else
build the building." It didn't take the contractor long to decide he wanted
to use urethane insulation. |
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It was amazing to me
how it worked out. We sprayed a lot of foam in Brent's house, and it cost him
quite a bit of money because it was such a large home. Always after when I
would meet him, he would tell me his heat bill was less than any of his rent
houses or homes of anybody else he knew. And his home was two or three times
larger. Also, the builder started having me insulate most of his new custom
built houses. He told me he would explain to his clients the best insulation
was the spray-in-place urethane. It would cost a little more, but it was by
far the best. Most of the owners opted for the urethane. Never have I had a customer
tell me that he did not save money by using the urethane spray-in-place
insulation. You can spend all the time you want with R-values and
"k" factors, and "prove" on paper there is no way the
urethane can do the insulation job that the fiberglass will. In the real
world, I can assure anyone there is no way fiber insulation can be as
effective as spray-in-place urethane -- not even close. R-value tables are
truly part of the "Fairy Tale." They show the solid and the fiber
insulations side by side, implying they can be compared. The fact is, without
taking installation conditions into account, comparisons are meaningless.
Spray-in-place urethane foam provides its own vapor barrier, water barrier,
and wind barrier. None of the other insulations are as effective without
special care taken at installation. The fiber insulations must be protected
from wind, water and water vapor. Again the tables need a second table to
state installation conditions.
Meadow Gold Company was
going to build a freezer in Idaho Falls, Idaho. Chet, the plant manager was a
good friend of the local Butler dealer. The local Butler dealer and I had
become good friends. A Butler building does not lend itself very well to a
freezer if you are going to insulate the freezer with expanded polystyrene.
So the three of us got together and planned a freezer that would accommodate
the needs of Meadow Gold yet be built of a Butler building and be properly
insulated. This was in my first year of spraying polyurethane foam, and at
that time I believed all the literature and knew what we were doing was going
to be just right. It turned out even better. The then current R-value table
showed one inch of urethane equal to 2.5 inches of expanded polystyrene. So,
I suggested we spray the metal building with four inches of urethane to
replace the 10 inches of expanded polystyrene normally used by Meadow Gold
for freezers. Meadow Gold Company was
going to build a freezer in Idaho Falls, Idaho. Chet, the plant manager was a
good friend of the local Butler dealer. The local Butler dealer and I had
become good friends. A Butler building does not lend itself very well to a
freezer if you are going to insulate the freezer with expanded polystyrene.
So the three of us got together and planned a freezer that would accommodate
the needs of Meadow Gold yet be built of a Butler building and be properly
insulated. This was in my first year of spraying polyurethane foam, and at
that time I believed all the literature and knew what we were doing was going
to be just right. It turned out even better. The then current R-value table
showed one inch of urethane equal to 2.5 inches of expanded polystyrene. So,
I suggested we spray the metal building with four inches of urethane to
replace the 10 inches of expanded polystyrene normally used by Meadow Gold
for freezers. Chet considered one
alternative to his predicament was to turn one of the older freezers that had
been used as a cooler back into a freezer. Then maybe he could make a cooler
out of the new building with the just the one compressor. It was not a
satisfactory arrangement, but it maybe could work. The other thing Chet kept
telling us was that he would know as soon as he turned on the freezer
equipment whether or not the building would work. When I pressed him, he said
that normally it takes five days to bring a freezer down to 10 F below zero
-- needed for ice cream. When he turned on the new freezer, with only the one
compressor, the temperature dropped to 18F degrees below zero by the second
morning. They had their freezer. It ran the entire summer using only the
single compressor. A few weeks after start
up of the freezer, I was visited by a Meadow Gold engineer from Chicago. He
wanted to know exactly what we had done to insulate the freezer. One
compressor should not be able to hold the temperature as it was doing. I
explained to him exactly what we had done. He seemed satisfied and he left. A
few weeks later he showed up again with his boss. We went to the plant and
verified with an ice pick the thickness of the foam. It was indeed four
inches in the walls and five inches in the ceiling. Here again they
reiterated that the building should not be operating as it was. What they
were telling me was that even though I had used one inch of urethane to
replace 2.5 inches of expanded polystyrene, the building was still requiring
only 50 percent of the normal compressor power for cooling. As you can
imagine, the experience made me a lot more bold, and I used the information
to sell more freezer insulation jobs. One of our largest
freezer insulation projects was a sixty thousand square foot freezer at
Clearfield, Utah. I was able to talk the general contractor into letting us
insulate with spray-in-place polyurethane foam the brand-new all-concrete
freezer he was building. This building was the 12th in a chain of freezers.
My friend Bob, the contractor, had taken it upon himself to make the switch
from the ten inches of expanded polystyrene to four inches of urethane with a
fifth inch on the roof. The building was built with tilt up concrete
insulated on the interior side of the concrete with spray-in-place urethane.
We then sprayed on a three-fourths of an inch thick layer of plaster as the
thermal barrier. Over the pre-stressed concrete roof panels, we put five
inches of spray-in-place urethane and then covered it with hot tar and rock.
(This is an old CPR-specification). I was on the job the
last day. As we finished up the owner showed up. He had expected to see ten
inches of expanded polystyrene, and here was four inches of urethane. I told
him he would like the four inches of urethane as it would be even better than
the expanded polystyrene, based on my previous experience. He told me he was
sicker than a dog because he felt like there was no way that could be true.
It was too late for him to do anything about it. If he could have, he would
have changed the contract instantly, but he was stuck and felt stuck. They had 12 other
similar size freezers, except the others were insulated with expanded
polystyrene. The normal way of operating them was to use three large
compressor assemblies. Two of the compressors would be needed all summer to
keep the building cold, and the third one would be a standby unit, in case
one of the other two had problems. About a year later, I
received a phone call from one of the managers. He asked me if I had time to
insulate another sixty thousand square foot freezer in Clearfield, Utah. I
assured him we had the time, the inclination, and the excitement to do it,
but I thought the owner wanted nothing to do with urethane foam insulation.
The manager explained to me that not only had the Clearfield freezer operated
better than any other freezer in their line, it had operated for less than
half the costs of any others. They were adding another sixty thousand square
feet without adding more compressors. The compressor power available to them
because of the urethane insulation efficiency allowed them to do it. The
building had run very nicely through the hot part of the summer with just one
compressor. Now they would be able to run two buildings off of two
compressors and still have a spare. Again, this is
anecdotal evidence, but let me assure you that you will get the same results
if you do the same thing as we have. I have insulated too many buildings now
to know that this will happen in every case. Never can you use an R-value
from a fiber insulation and compare it to the R-value of a foam insulation.
Nor can you use the R-value of a foam insulation if it is in sheet form and
compare it to the R-value of the foam insulation if it is spray-in-place.
Spray-in-place polyurethane is an absolute minimum of three to ten times as
effective as any other insulation available today. During the late 1970s,
the FTC went after the urethane foam suppliers for misleading advertising
especially with regard to fire claims. A consent decree followed. It
destroyed a tremendous amount of confidence in the use of urethane. Up to
that point, Commonwealth Edison would give Gold Medallion approval for homes
insulated with 1.25 inches of spray-in-place urethane in the side walls of
masonry constructed homes. True, that was anecdotal evidence, but also true,
it worked. Much work was done in the early 1970s using a 1.25 inches urethane
as a replacement for wall insulation in a home. Not only did it replace the
wall insulation, it also replaced the exterior sheathing. The buildings are
stronger and better insulated when sprayed with the 1.25 inches of urethane. Understanding
the two purposes of insulation gives a standard to measure the insulations: I. Heat loss There is a little
understood part about insulation that needs to be covered. There is a
substantial difference between insulation for temperature control and
insulation for heat loss control. For instance, the graph (below) shows the
heat loss control of the spray-in-place urethane foam insulation. Any
insulation will have a similar graph but with thicker amounts of insulation.
This graph points out that more insulation is not necessarily cost effective.
There is a point where more insulation is pointless from a total heat loss
perspective. |
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The graph shows that
70% of heat loss from conductance is stopped by a one inch thickness of
spray-in-place urethane foam. Remember we are going to stop nearly 100% of
the heat loss from air infiltration with the first one-fourth of an inch of
urethane foam. The second inch of spray-in-place urethane stops about 90% of
the heat loss and the third inch 95% and so forth. Thermal
Diffusivity and Heat Sinks It should be noted that
when the urethane is used on the exterior of a heat sink, such as concrete,
the actual effective R-value is approximately doubled. This is why with the
Monolithic Dome, we are able to calculate effective R-values in excess of 60.
A heat sink is any substance capable of storing large amounts of heat. Most
commonly we think of concrete, brick, water, adobe and earth as heat sink
materials used in building. The property of a heat sink to act as an
insulation is called thermal diffusivity. The simple explanation
for the way it works is: As the temperature of the atmosphere cycles from
cold to hot to cold to hot the heat sink absorbs or gives up heat. But
because the heat sink can absorb so much heat it never catches up with the
full range of the cycle. Therefore, the temperature of the heat sink tends to
average. Large heat sinks will average over many days, weeks or even months. An example is the adobe
hacienda with its 2 to 6 foot thick walls. By the time the adobe walls begin
to absorb the daytime heat it is night time and the same heat then escapes
into the cooler night. Therefore the temperature would average. Because the
mass of the adobe is so large the temperature averages over periods of
months. Adobe acts as an insulation even though adobe has a minimal “R”
value. You can see from the
graph that urethane thicknesses beyond four or five inches is practically
immaterial. We use three inches for most of our construction. Two inches will
do a very superior job. We have insulated many metal buildings with one inch
of urethane and the drop in heat loss is absolutely dramatic. Obviously the first
quarter inch takes care of the wind blowing through the cracks. (It usually
takes an inch to be sure the cracks are all filled.) The balance of the inch
adds the thermal protection. II. Surface
temperature control Surface temperature
control is the second reason for insulation. In many cases it is the most
important reason for the insulation. I noticed this phenomena first while
insulating potato storages. We had various
customers ask us to insulate the buildings anywhere from two to five inches
of urethane. The buildings insulated with two inches would hold the
temperatures of the potatoes properly, just as well as the buildings
insulated with five inches. The difference came in the condensation. Potato
storages are kept up at very high humidity levels. The buildings with the two
inches of urethane would have far more condensation than those with An
engineer from the Upjohn company explained this to me. He stated that thicker
insulation is absolutely necessary to maintain higher interior surface temperatures.
One and a half inches of urethane on the walls and ceiling of a potato
storage would control the heat loss from the building, but it took a minimum
of three inches of urethane to control the interior surface temperature. Four
inches was even better. With five inches the difference is practically
negligible. The only place where we have felt the need for five inches of
urethane was insulating the roof or ceiling of a sub-zero freezer. Underground
housing — surface temperature control vs. heat loss control. Most underground
housing is in trouble from mold and mildew growth. The cause is not enough
insulation to control interior surface temperatures. Rarely is there a
problem with total heat loss. Water vapor condenses on the surface allowing
mold to grow. Mold makes people sick. The only solution is lots of insulation
for temperature control and ignore total heat loss. My experience is that
R-value tables can be used as indicators. They need modifications to make
them equal to real world conditions. There needs to be allowances made. They
must show equivalents. These equivalents will be more like one inch of
spray-in-place urethane equal to four inches of fiberglass in a normal
installation. Footnotes to the table will need to define degradation of
insulations in real world conditions. Only then will the "R-value"
Fairy Tale become a real world success story. |
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