by Perry525 »
Sun Jan 23, 2011 10:26 am
Lets go over this again.
Heat always moves to cold.
Water vapour always condenses onto a surface that is
colder than the air temperature that is holding the water
vapour.
Therefore, for every air temperature, that holds a certain
amount of water vapour, there is a lower surface or air
temperature that will chill the passing air, lower its
temperature and cause the water vapour to fall out and
either appear as condensation on the surface or
disappear inside the wall, wood, paper, leather whatever.
Or if its outside we see it as dew, frost, rain, hail or snow.
Perhaps you should think of molecules of water vapour
as being so small that they can freely move between the
surface molecules of most things used in building. Think
of a box full of footballs, the footballs being the air
molecules, then think of the molecules of water vapour
as being tiny ball bearings that can fill the large spaces
between those footballs, dependent on their
temperature.
Therefore, water vapour enters the bubbles of air that
are entrained into the mortar that is used to build our
homes and makes it way through the walls, etc towards
the cold on the other side to escape into the cold air.
Our traditional homes built to shed water allow this
process.
It is very difficult to make a wall or ceiling water vapour
proof.
There is a move to making modular rooms in factories
where the structure can be more carefully manufactured
and be closer to being water vapour proof.
In the normal world, all we can do is cover walls and
ceilings with almost water vapour proof plastic sheets
and keep most of the vapour inside our rooms or expel it
to the outside where it is usually colder and drier.
Some damp in a wall does no harm, and as mentioned
above, the water vapour will move outwards towards the
cold in winter and inwards towards the cold in summer if
there is air conditioning.
Keep in mind that we put water vapour into our homes.
Usually by washing, cooking, breathing and sweating.
The cooking and washing is usually in defined rooms
which can be carefully equipped and constructed to deal
with this problem.
Our living rooms are usually dry apart from breathing and
sweating, young people and animals sweat and breath
more as they tend to be more active, but they also tend
to be outside more.
Older people are less active, create less water vapour
and tend to be indoors more.
From the above you will see that the traditional solid wall,
drafty home, with an open fire was ideal for handling
water vapour.
Modern homes in our attempts to save fuel are sealed,
perhaps nearly air tight, retaining more water vapour.
Todays logic, seal your home to save on heating costs!
Pay a small fortune on buying, fitting and running
controlled mechanical ventilation.
You can use the traditional method, open a window for a
few minutes and let the warm wet air out and colder drier
air in.
At the point where the external insulation meets the solid
wall, you are furthest away from the room heat source
and at the coldest point in the home. This is where the
water vapour condenses.
Where you are trying to save money on heating your
home it makes sense to have the insulation as close to
your comfort zone as possible, keeping the comfort
zone as small as possible.
Spending good money on heating the mass of your brick
walls.
There is little point in adding the mass of your brick walls
to your heating bill, something you have to warm, before
your room feels warm.
Having the usual insulations on the room side of the wall
makes sense, if the room side water vapour barrier is not
perfect the escaping water vapour merely passes
through the wall.
However, some internal insulation, is flimsy, some is
easily damaged or marked, these need careful
consideration before use as visitors and children do not
always understand how easily damaged they are.
Covering the outside of a home with slates or tiles that
shed water, keeping the solid wall dry, helps with the
insulation. Water is 4000 times better at transferring heat
than dry air, a wet or damp wall is a liability.
There is a different type of open cell, self draining
insulation called Icynene, this is wind proof, it allows both
water vapour and water through its cells, when it gets
wet, the water simply drains down and disappears, water
vapour passes through without hindrance, yet it is as
good an insulation as most currently available, being
99% air.