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May 21, 2013 – SEABEC - Zen and the Art of Building Enclosure Design Super Insulated Building Enclosures – Balancing Energy, Durability, and Economics in the Pacific Northwest Graham Finch, MASc, P.Eng RDH Building Sciences Inc. Vancouver, BC/Seattle, WA

Super Insulated Building Enclosures (SEABEC 2013)

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Presentation Outline: - What are "Super-Insulated" buildings and what are the drivers? - Thermal bridging- problems and solutions - Designing of highly insulated walls - insulation placement & durability considerations - Super-Insulated wood-frame building enclosure design guide

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Page 1: Super Insulated Building Enclosures (SEABEC 2013)

May 21, 2013 – SEABEC - Zen and the Art of Building Enclosure Design

Super Insulated Building Enclosures – Balancing Energy, Durability, and Economics in the Pacific Northwest

!   Graham Finch, MASc, P.Eng RDH Building Sciences Inc. Vancouver, BC/Seattle, WA

Page 2: Super Insulated Building Enclosures (SEABEC 2013)

Presentation Outline

!   What are “Super-Insulated” buildings and what are the drivers?

!   Thermal bridging – problems and solutions

!   Designing of highly insulated walls – insulation placement & durability considerations

!   Super-Insulated wood-frame building enclosure design guide

Page 3: Super Insulated Building Enclosures (SEABEC 2013)

!   Energy codes outline minimum thermal performance criteria based on climate zone !  ASHRAE 90.1, IECC – US

!  WSEC 2012, SEC 2012– Washington State & City of Seattle

!  OEESC 2010 – Oregon State

!   Energy codes in Pacific Northwest are some of most stringent but are also the best implemented in North America

!   Building enclosure (R-value/U-values) very important part of compliance

!   Effective R-values considered

From Energy Codes to Super Insulation

Page 4: Super Insulated Building Enclosures (SEABEC 2013)

!   Most Energy Codes now consider effective R-values

!   Nominal R-values = Rated R-values of insulation which do not include impacts of how they are installed !   For example R-20 batt insulation or

R-10 foam insulation

!   Effective R-values include impacts of insulation installation and thermal bridges !   For example nominal R-20 batts within

steel studs becoming ~R-9 effective, or in wood studs ~R-15 effective

Effective R-values

Page 5: Super Insulated Building Enclosures (SEABEC 2013)

!   In Pacific Northwest - minimum energy code R-value targets generally in range of: !  R-15 to R-25 effective for walls

!  R-25 to R-50 effective for roofs

!  R-2 to R-4 for windows

!   Green or more energy efficient building programs including Passive House - R-value targets in range of: !  R-30 to R-50+ effective for walls

!  R-40 to R-60+ effective for roofs

!  R-6+ for windows

!   Other drivers – comfort, passive design, mold-free

!  What does Super Insulation mean?

From Energy Codes to Super-Insulation

Page 6: Super Insulated Building Enclosures (SEABEC 2013)

Super Insulated?

12” EPS insulation boards (blocks?) R-54

Page 7: Super Insulated Building Enclosures (SEABEC 2013)

Super Insulated?

8” XPS insulation below grade R-40

6” mineral fiber (stainless brick ties) over insulated 2x6 wood frame ~R-38

Page 8: Super Insulated Building Enclosures (SEABEC 2013)

!   Good to have super insulated walls and roofs – but what about thermal bridges and poorly insulated windows?

Super Insulated?

Page 9: Super Insulated Building Enclosures (SEABEC 2013)

!   Thermal bridging occurs when a more conductive material (e.g. metal, concrete, wood etc.) bypasses a less conductive material (insulation)

!   Minimizing thermal bridging is key to energy code compliance and an energy efficient building

!   Balance of good window performance and appropriate window to wall ratio

!   Use of exterior continuous insulation with thermally improved cladding attachments

!  Minimizing the big thermal bridges

!   Energy codes have historically focused on assembly R-values – however recently more attention is being placed on R-values of interfaces and details

!   Also impacts comfort, condensation, and mold

Energy Codes and Thermal Bridging – A Balancing Act

Page 10: Super Insulated Building Enclosures (SEABEC 2013)

!   Whole building airtightness testing requirements in Seattle and Washington State building codes are driving improvements in energy efficiency

!   Various solutions to achieve higher degrees of airtightness

!   Target of 0.40 cfm/ft2 at 75 Pa is frequently being met – range of 0.10 to 0.20 cfm/ft2 possible with some solutions

Building and Energy Codes and Airtightness

Page 11: Super Insulated Building Enclosures (SEABEC 2013)

!   Windows significantly influence overall building enclosure performance !   Think about what R-3

windows do within an R-20 wall – where is the balance?

!   Tend to see higher window to wall ratios in multi-family and commercial buildings

!   40% to 70%+ is common !   vs 15% to 30% in homes

!   Optimized area and tuned SHGC, windows can have a positive impact (passive design strategies)

Challenges to Energy Efficiency – Windows

Page 12: Super Insulated Building Enclosures (SEABEC 2013)

Impact of Windows on Whole Building R-values

Page 13: Super Insulated Building Enclosures (SEABEC 2013)

!   Concrete balconies, eyebrows and exposed slab edges are one of the most significant thermal bridges

!   Essentially ~R-1 component

!   This reduce overall effective R-value of the whole wall area by 40 to 60% (for something that is just a few % of the overall wall area)

!   Adding insulation to surrounding walls often can’t make up for the loss associated with the detail

Challenges to Energy Efficiency – Balcony & Exposed Slabs

Page 14: Super Insulated Building Enclosures (SEABEC 2013)

!   Example of slab/balcony impact: !   Slab edge typically occupies ~8% of the

gross wall area (8” slab in 8’8” high wall)

!   Balconies may occupy 1-2% of the gross wall area

!  Window to wall ratio affects opaque wall area

Impact of Concrete Balconies and Exposed Slab Edges

Exposed  Slab  Edge  Percentage  for  Different  WWR  

100%  wall:  0%  windows  

60%  wall:  40%  windows  

50%  wall:  50%  windows  

40%  wall:  60%  windows  

20%  wall:  80%  windows  

8”  slab,  8’  floor  to  ceiling  

7.7%   12.8%   15.4%   19.2%   38.5%  Exposed  Slab  Edge  Percentage  for  Different  WWR  

100%  wall:  0%  windows  

60%  wall:  40%  windows  

50%  wall:  50%  windows  

40%  wall:  60%  windows  

20%  wall:  80%  windows  

8”  slab,  8’  floor  to  ceiling   7.7%   12.8%   15.4%   19.2%   38.5%  

Page 15: Super Insulated Building Enclosures (SEABEC 2013)

!   Cast-in thermal breaks !  Standard in Europe – becoming

more available in North America

!   Pre-cast and discretely attached concrete balconies (bolt on)

Solutions for Balconies

Page 16: Super Insulated Building Enclosures (SEABEC 2013)

!   Exterior insulation is only as good as the cladding attachment strategy

!   How to achieve continuous insulation performance?

!   Flashings and other details also important

Challenges to Energy Efficiency – Cladding Attachment

Page 17: Super Insulated Building Enclosures (SEABEC 2013)

!  Many Possible Strategies – Wide Range of Performance

Cladding Attachment through Exterior Insulation

Page 18: Super Insulated Building Enclosures (SEABEC 2013)

Effective R-values of Various Cladding Attachments

Goo

d B

ad

Ugl

y

Page 19: Super Insulated Building Enclosures (SEABEC 2013)

Strategies: Thermally Improved Cladding Attachments

Page 20: Super Insulated Building Enclosures (SEABEC 2013)

Strategies Wood-frame: Screws through Exterior Insulation

Longer cladding Fasteners directly through rigid insulation (up to 2” for light claddings)

Long screws through vertical strapping and rigid insulation creates truss (8”+) – short cladding fasteners into vertical strapping Rigid shear block type connection

through insulation, cladding to vertical strapping

Page 21: Super Insulated Building Enclosures (SEABEC 2013)

!   Wide range of R-values marketed with polyisocyanurate (polyiso) and closed-cell (2 pcf) sprayfoam insulation

!   Polyiso – reports of R-5 up to R-7.5 !   Closed cell sprayfoam – reports of R-5 to 6.5

!   Both influenced by age (off-gassing of blowing gases, replaced with air makes worse with time)

!   R-value changes with temperature

!   Higher density equals lower R-values

!   This isn’t new science or information !   Real long-term thermal resistance (LTTR)

values for both products in the R-4.5 to R-5.5 range when you need them

Challenges to True Energy Efficiency – R-value Claims

Page 22: Super Insulated Building Enclosures (SEABEC 2013)

Real Insulation R-values – Old Science

From: Canadian Building Digest #149, 1972

Vari

ous

N.A

. Pol

yiso

Sam

ples

&

Age

s - N

ames

Rem

oved

Old

er a

nd h

ighe

r den

sity

winter summer

Room Temperature

Page 23: Super Insulated Building Enclosures (SEABEC 2013)

!   Wide range of aluminum foil radiant barrier products on market (paints too)

!   Varying marketing claims – anything from R-1 all the way up to R-15+

!   Realistically may achieve R-1 to R-3 (very still air) if product faces a dead air cavity (ref. testing by many institutes)

!   Be very wary of false claims & suspicious test results

!   Why care? Often cheaper to use real insulation

Challenges to True Energy Efficiency – To Good to be True!

Page 24: Super Insulated Building Enclosures (SEABEC 2013)

!   Wood-framed buildings generally provide good R-values, but… !   Taller wood-frame buildings – higher stud framing factors

!   Solid wood buildings – Cross Laminated Timber (CLT)

!   Where to insulate & air-seal - what assemblies to use?

New and Upcoming Challenges to Energy Efficiency?

Page 25: Super Insulated Building Enclosures (SEABEC 2013)

!   Trend towards more highly insulated building enclosures due to higher energy code targets and uptake of passive design strategies !  Often means new enclosure assemblies (mainly walls) and

construction techniques

!  Higher R-value windows (triple glazing and less conductive window frames)

!  Reduction of thermal bridging, more structural analysis of façade components, balconies etc.

!  Super insulation achieved with proper balance!

!   Long-term performance of new assemblies (particularly wood frame) can be a challenge in our wet environment

Moving Towards Super Insulated Enclosures

Page 26: Super Insulated Building Enclosures (SEABEC 2013)

!   Thermal insulation continuity & effectiveness – energy code driven

!   Airflow control/airtightness – energy code and building code driven

!   Control of condensation and vapor diffusion – building code driven

!   Control of exterior moisture/rainwater & detailing – building code driven

!  More insulation = less heat flow to dry out moisture !  Amount, type and placement of insulations matters

!  Greater need to more robust and better detailed assemblies

!  Potentially more sensitive to vapor, air & moisture issues

Energy Efficient Building Enclosure Design Fundamentals

Page 27: Super Insulated Building Enclosures (SEABEC 2013)

What about the Pacific Northwest

Page 28: Super Insulated Building Enclosures (SEABEC 2013)

!   Continue to repair moisture damaged buildings in the Pacific Northwest

Not Super Insulated.. Lower Risk But Still Failed

Page 29: Super Insulated Building Enclosures (SEABEC 2013)

Definitely Not Super Insulated.. But Still Failed

Page 30: Super Insulated Building Enclosures (SEABEC 2013)

“Super Insulated” Glazing Systems .. Failed

Systemic Failure of proprietary triple glazing units

Page 31: Super Insulated Building Enclosures (SEABEC 2013)

!   Rainwater penetration causes most problems –poor details (e.g. lack of, poorly implemented, bad materials)

!   Air leakage condensation can cause problems

!   Vapor diffusion contributes but doesn’t cause most problems – unless within a sensitive assembly

!   Many windows leak and sub-sill drainage and flashings are critical, other details and interfaces also important

!   Insulation inboard of structural elements decreases temperatures which increases risk for moisture damage

!   Durability of building materials is very important

!   Watch over-use of impermeable materials in wet locations

!   Drained & ventilated rainscreen walls & details work well !   Unproven materials/systems can be risky

What Have We Learned from Past Enclosure Failures?

Page 32: Super Insulated Building Enclosures (SEABEC 2013)

Insulation Placement and Assembly Design Considerations

Interior Insulation

Exterior Insulation

Split Insulation

Page 33: Super Insulated Building Enclosures (SEABEC 2013)

Getting to Higher R-values – Placement of Insulation

Baseline 2x6 w/ R-22 batts = R-16 effective

Exterior Insulation – R-20 to R-40+ effective •  Constraints: cladding attachment, wall thickness •  Good for wood/steel/concrete

Deep/Double Stud– R-20 to R-40+ effective •  Constraints wall

thickness •  Good for wood,

wasted for steel

Split Insulation– R-20 to R-40+ effective •  Constraints: cladding

attachment •  Good for wood, palatable for

steel

New vs Retrofit Considerations

Page 34: Super Insulated Building Enclosures (SEABEC 2013)

!   Insulation outboard of structure and control layers (air/vapor/water)

!   Thermal mass at interior where useful !   Cladding attachment biggest source of thermal loss/bridging

!   Excellent performance in all climate zones – But is not the panacea, can still mess it up

Exterior Insulated Walls

Steel Stud Concrete Heavy Timber (CLT)

Page 35: Super Insulated Building Enclosures (SEABEC 2013)

!   Key Considerations: !   Cladding attachment

!  Wall thickness

!   Heat Control: Exterior insulation (any type)

!   Air Control: Membrane on exterior of structure

!   Vapor Control: Membrane on exterior of structure

!  Water Control: Rainscreen cladding, membrane on exterior of structure, surface of insulation

Key Considerations - Exterior Insulation Assemblies

Page 36: Super Insulated Building Enclosures (SEABEC 2013)

Key Considerations - Split Insulation Assemblies

!   Key Considerations: !   Exterior insulation type

!   Cladding attachment

!   Sequencing & detailing

!   Heat Control: Exterior and stud space Insulation (designed)

!   Air Control: House-wrap adhered/sheet/liquid membrane on sheathing, sealants/tapes etc. Often vapor permeable

!   Vapor Control: Poly or VB paint at interior, plywood/OSB sheathing

!  Water Control: Rainscreen cladding, WRB membrane, surface of insulation

Page 37: Super Insulated Building Enclosures (SEABEC 2013)

Split Insulation Assemblies – Exterior Insulation Selection

!   Rigid exterior foam insulations (XPS, EPS, Polyiso, closed cell SPF) are vapor impermeable (in thicknesses, 2”+) !   Is the vapor barrier on the wrong side?

!  Does the wall have two vapor barriers?

!  How much insulation should be put outside of the sheathing? – More is always better, but is there room? Cost?

!   Semi-rigid or rigid mineral or glass fiber insulations are vapor permeable and address these concerns

!   Vapor permeance properties of sheathing membrane (WRB)/air-barrier is also important

Page 38: Super Insulated Building Enclosures (SEABEC 2013)

Split Insulation and Moisture Risk Assessment

Insulation Ratio Here is over 2/3 to the exterior of the sheathing Careful with lower ratios with foam

Page 39: Super Insulated Building Enclosures (SEABEC 2013)

!   R-value design target up to R-25 for steel framed wall assembly. Energy modeling showed could trade-off a bit but no lower than R-18.2 (code)

!   6” steel stud frame wall structure (supported outboard of slab edge, and perimeter beams)

!   Expectation to be cost effective, buildable and minimize wall thickness

!   Tasked with the evaluation of a number of potential options

!   Lack of performance from standard practices helped innovate a new solution

Case Study: Bullitt Center – Split Insulation Wall Assembly

Page 40: Super Insulated Building Enclosures (SEABEC 2013)

Bullitt Center – Exterior Wall Assembly Evaluation

Baseline: R-19 batts within 2x6 steel stud with exposed slab edges = R-6.4 effective Considered 2x8 and 2x10 studs - still less than R-8

Target R-value up to R-25

Vertical Z-Girts (16” oc) 5” (R-20) exterior insulation plus R-19 batts within 2x6 steel stud = R-11.0 effective

Horiz. Z-Girts (24” oc) 5” (R-20) exterior insulation plus R-19 batts within 2x6 steel stud = R-14.1 effective Crossing Z-girts also evaluated <R-16 effective

Intermittent Metal Clips 5” (R-20) exterior insulation plus R-19 batts within 2x6 steel stud = R-17.1 effective up to R-21 with some modifications

Page 41: Super Insulated Building Enclosures (SEABEC 2013)

The Need to Go Higher – Reduce the Thermal Bridging

Page 42: Super Insulated Building Enclosures (SEABEC 2013)

The Need to Go Higher – Reduce the Thermal Bridging

Intermittent Fiberglass Spacers, 3½” to 6” (R-14 to R-24) exterior insulation = R-19.1 to R-26.3 + effective

Page 43: Super Insulated Building Enclosures (SEABEC 2013)

!   Metal panel

!   1” horizontal metal hat tracks !   3 ½” semi-rigid mineral fiber (R-14.7)

between 3 ½” fiberglass clips

!   Fluid applied vapor permeable WRB/Air barrier on gypsum sheathing

!   6” mineral fiber batts (R-19) between 6” steel studs

!   Gypsum drywall

!   Supported outboard slab edge (reduce thermal bridging)

!   Effective R-value R-26.6

Bullitt Center – Exterior Wall Assembly

Page 44: Super Insulated Building Enclosures (SEABEC 2013)

!   Double 2x4/2x6 stud, single deep 2x10, 2x12, I-Joist etc.

!   Common wood-frame wall assembly in many passive houses (and prefabricated highly insulated walls)

!   Often add interior service wall – greater control over airtightness

!   Inherently at a higher risk for damage if sheathing gets wet (rainwater, air leakage, vapor diffusion) – due to more interior insulation

Double/Deep Stud Insulated Walls

Page 45: Super Insulated Building Enclosures (SEABEC 2013)

Key Considerations – Double Stud/Deep Stud

!   Key Considerations: !   Air-sealing

!   Rainwater management/detailing

!   Heat Control: Double stud cavity fill insulation(s) – dense-pack cellulose, fiberglass, sprayfoam

!   Air Control: House-wrap/membrane on sheathing, poly, airtight drywall on interior, OSB/plywood at interior, tapes, sealants, sprayfoam. Airtightness on both sides good

!   Vapor Control: Poly, VB paint or OSB/plywood at interior

!  Water Control: Rainscreen cladding, WRB at house-wrap/membrane, flashings etc.

Page 46: Super Insulated Building Enclosures (SEABEC 2013)

Deep/Double Stud and Moisture Risk Assessment

Page 47: Super Insulated Building Enclosures (SEABEC 2013)

!   Guide to the Design of Energy Efficient Building Enclosures – for Wood Multi-Unit Residential Buildings

!   Provides design and detailing guidance for highly insulated wood-frame wall & roof assemblies

!   Contains North American energy code guidance, building science fundamentals

!   Insulation placement, air barrier systems, cladding attachment

!   Available as a free download direct from FP Innovations (google the title above)

Further Guidance on Highly Insulated Walls & Details

Page 48: Super Insulated Building Enclosures (SEABEC 2013)

!   Deep energy retrofit of 1980s vintage concrete frame multi-unit residential building – owners decision to renew aesthetic (old concrete, leaky windows)

!   Original overall effective R-value R-2.8

!   Exterior insulate and over-clad existing exposed concrete walls (R-18 eff.)

!   Install new triple glazed fiberglass frame windows (R-6 eff.) – triple glazing incremental upgrade <5 year payback

!   Retrofitted effective R-9.1 (super-insulated for a building of this type)

!   55% reduction in air leakage measured

!   Enclosure improvements 20% overall savings (87% space-heating)

!   Actual savings being monitored – seeing higher than predicted savings

Final Thoughts – Super-Insulation Retrofit Case Study

Page 49: Super Insulated Building Enclosures (SEABEC 2013)

!   Super-Insulated building enclosures require careful design and detailing to ensure durability !  Balancing materials, cost, and detailing considerations

!  Cladding attachment detailing – minimize loss of R-value of exterior insulation

!  Shifting insulation to the outside the structure improves performance and durability – balance is often cost

!   Super-Insulated buildings require balancing thermal performance of all components & airtightness !  No point super-insulating walls/roofs if you have large thermal

bridges or poor performing windows - address the weakest links first

!   Opportunities for both new and existing buildings

Final Thoughts – “The Art and Balance”

Page 50: Super Insulated Building Enclosures (SEABEC 2013)

Questions

!   Graham Finch – [email protected]

!   Highly Insulated Wood-frame Enclosure Guide – FP Innovations