Publication date: October 2015
Source:Building and Environment, Volume 92
Author(s): Eshrar Latif , Mihaela Anca Ciupala , Simon Tucker , Devapriya Chitral Wijeyesekera , Darryl John Newport
An in situ experiment on a full-scale timber frame test building was carried out to study the hygrothermal performance of wood-hemp composite insulation in timber frame wall panels with and without a vapour barrier. The heat transfer properties and the likelihood of mould growth and condensation in the panels were compared. Step changes in the internal relative humidity were performed to explore the effects of high, normal and low internal moisture loads on the wall panels. No significant difference in the average equivalent thermal transmittance (U-values) between the panels with and without a vapour barrier was observed. The average equivalent U-values of the panels were close to the U-values calculated from the manufacturers’ declared thermal conductivity values of the insulation. The likelihood of condensation was higher at the interface of the wood-hemp insulation and the oriented strand board (OSB) in the panel without a vapour barrier. In terms of the parametric assessment of the mould germination potential, the relative humidity, the temperature and the exposure conditions in the insulation-OSB interfaces of the panel without a vapour barrier were found to be more favourable to the germination of mould spores. Nonetheless, when the insulations were dismantled, no mould was visually detected.
Source:Building and Environment, Volume 92
Author(s): Eshrar Latif , Mihaela Anca Ciupala , Simon Tucker , Devapriya Chitral Wijeyesekera , Darryl John Newport