Tags: moisture

INTRODUCTION

Inadequate control of airflow through the building envelope is often a primary factor contributing to premature building envelope failures. If moisture-laden air is permitted to travel through the building envelope, the moisture may, under certain environmental conditions, condense within the walls of the structure. In above-freezing conditions, this may cause corrosion or rotting of the structural components, staining of the interior and/or exterior facade, and may stimulate the growth of mold and mildew. In cold climates, accumulated moisture may experience numerous freeze-thaw cycles, which can precipitate spalling and the formation of icicles on the exterior facade.

Air leakage is also a concern in areas where interior temperatures differ greatly from exterior temperatures, such as the Prairie Provinces, which can experience periods of extreme cold during the winter and extreme heat during the summer. The excessive heating and cooling loads placed upon buildings in this type of climate leads not only to an increase in space conditioning costs to the owner, but also has a negative impact upon the environment through increased energy consumption and the emission of greenhouse gases. In fact, studies conducted on high-rise residential and commercial buildings in cold climates have shown that anywhere from 20 to 50 percent of heat loss can be attributed to air leakage.

In Canada, building rehabilitation for roofing and wall system repairs and replacement cost an estimated $7.5 billion annually. A conservative estimate of the premature failure rate is 3 to 5 percent, or $225 to $375 million per year, with premature failure defined as any performance condition requiring repair or replacement of the system before the benchmark date. The building envelope has been identified as being particularly vulnerable to durability problems.
It is the growing global awareness of these air leakage-related problems that is driving the federal governments in Canada and the United States to introduce more stringent codes and regulations to govern building air permeance. In order to improve occupant health and safety, revisions were made to the National Building Code of Canada (NBCC) in 1995 designed to reduce air leakage in buildings, including those buildings classified within Part 3 of the Code1. Public Works Canada also recently revised their National Master Specification to include air barrier inspection and testing. In the United States, Persily’s Envelope Design Guidelines for Federal Office Buildings: Thermal Integrity and Airtightness (1993) also documents the requirements as outlined in the NBCC. In addition, State Energy Codes are being adopted and/or revised, making air barriers a mandatory requirement in new construction and retrofits. ASHRAE/IENSA Energy Standard for Buildings Except Low-Rise Residential Buildings (90.1-1999) also governs building envelope sealing.
Recently, air barrier trade associations have formed in Canada and the United States with the objective to improve the quality of air barrier system installations by providing education and training for the workforce. For an installer to become ‘certified’ through the association, an applicant must possess the required knowledge of air barrier material and system theory, and demonstrate sufficient skills in practical applications. In addition, through the associations’ quality assurance programs, documented self-testing and on-site third party audits are performed to verify the quality of the installation, and confirm the certified installers’ ability to build to expected standards.

While there are numerous ASTM (American Society for Testing and Materials) methods, says Jan Luistermans, for testing air barrier systems and/or components, there is no generic regimen for the application of these techniques being utilized on a widespread basis. The need for a complete design, inspection and testing protocol for air barrier systems cannot be understated. A recent study concluded that even routine testing can have a significant impact upon the airtightness of a building. Where air leakage testing was conducted, there was an overall reduction in air leakage for the system, a significant decrease in heating and cooling loads, a reduction in greenhouse gas emissions, and an increase in the life cycle of the building envelope.
With the growing use of inaccessible air barrier systems (such as bituminous membranes), on-site inspection and testing during installation is necessary to identify problems before the system is covered with finishing materials. The cost to repair an air barrier system after it has been covered can be conservatively estimated to be 50-60 times the cost of a correct first-time installation. Hence, the need for inspection and testing is obvious.

1 Apr 2009, Comments Off

CFC Reviews CMHC Design Report on: Air leakage

Author: admin

Air leakage is the uncontrolled movement of air, with its heat and moisture, into or out of the building.
Conditioned air from the occupied space may migrate into the envelope or on to the outside: this is exfiltration. Unconditioned exterior air can infiltrate into the building. Both infiltration and exfiltration can cause damage to the building envelope, because both upset the balance of temperature and vapour-pressure that characterizes a welldesigned wall.
In winter, exfiltration carries moist indoor air to the exterior, where it can condense inside the wall assembly: This leads to moisture damage, mold growth, and other undesirable consequences.
Summer infiltration has the same effect in air-conditioned buildings, and winter infiltration creates cold surfaces inside the building that can cause condensation to form — leading to damaged interior finish and poor air quality from mold growth. For more information on the effect of air leakage on wall performance, see the article “Keeping Walls Dry,” available from the CMHC website Continuing Education for Architects http://www.cmhc.ca/en/inpr/bude/himu/co edar/index.cfm).
There is also a cost associated with heating or cooling the uncontrolled outdoor air to maintain the desired interior conditions. In fact, air leakage accounts for as much as one-third of the heating bill in a residence, and windows and their connection to the wall are major sources of air leakage (operable windows are most prone to leakage). Therefore, most windows have seals and weatherstripping to prevent air leakage where the glass is installed in the sash (or the frame, in a picture window), and where the sash meets the frame in an operable window.
The glazing seal (between the glass and the frame or sash) is commonly a two-sided tape made of a butyl compound, although some glazing seals are made of flexible vinyl. The vinyl seal is either a U-channel (often called a glazing boot) that slips into the sash (or directly into the frame, in a picture window) and accepts the glazing assembly to form a watertight, airtight seal or a finand- bulb assembly that is co-extruded onto a PVC glazing stop (see Figure 3a and b).
There is greater variety in sash seals in an operating window. Most windows have two seals: one to stop air infiltration (the primary air seal) and one to prevent moisture penetration. The moisture seal should be outboard of the air seal in a properly designed window. The primary air seal is often a vinyl bulb seal or foamed gasket (often vinyl-coated to prevent moisture damage); although a double-fin vinyl seal is sometimes used. Figure 3b shows a bulb seal acting as the primary air seal between the frame and sash of an operable window.
The moisture barrier should be designed to prevent moisture (for example, wind-driven rain) from penetrating the window and reaching the room side, but should also allow water to drain away from the window to the outside. Trapped moisture can cause damage to wood windows, which can lead to indoor air quality problems.
The moisture barrier should not be airtight, as operation of the window would create pressurization between the two seals that could drive trapped moisture into the window frame. The moisture barrier in Figure 3b is a double seal: the accordion seal prevents water entry into the sash pocket, and the polyester sweep seal acts as a rainscreen (while allowing incidental water to weep out of the sash pocket). For more information, refer to the study called Water Penetration Resistance of Windows: Manufacturing, Building Design, Installation and Maintenance Factors, available from CMHC. Moisture-barrier design should account for freezing (which can form ice dams) dirt accumulation, and painting, all of which can plug weep holes and prevent drainage.
Sweep seals are often used as a moisture barrier, and are in fact preferable to bulb or fin seals for this application: in cold temperatures, the moisture on the sill freezes the seal in place, and vinyl seals will tear more readily than sweep seals when the window is operated.
Sweep seals are also used in place of bulb or fin seals in sliding windows, because the latter interfere with the operation of the window. The use of sweep seals as a primary air seal is the main reason sliding windows have relatively high air leakage problems.
Window air leakage is characterized by the A rating in the CSA A440 Standard. Levels are A1, A2 and A3, with A3 being the least air leakage. This rating describes the measured rate of air leakage at a standard air pressure difference (75 Pa, which is approximately equivalent to wind blowing directly at the window, at a speed of about 40 km/h or 25 mph). A standard-size window is tested in accordance with a standard procedure (ASTM E283) under positive and negative pressures, and the A rating is based on the average of the test results.
The A rating values for operable window units only are:
A1 = 2.79 m3/h per metre of crack length
A2 = 1.65 m3/h per metre of crack length
A3 = 0.55 m3/h per metre of crack length
There is also a “Fixed” rating at 0.25 m3/h per metre of crack length, applied to nonoperable windows, and a “Storm” rating (used for storm panels only). In this context, “crack length” is the length of a crack through which air is expected to leak. For an operable window, it is the length of the sash perimeter; for a non-operable window, it is the perimeter of the glazing sightline.
Note that compliance with any building code based on the National Building Code of Canada requires that all windows must meet the minimum requirements of CSA A440. This means at least an A1 rating, which is indeed a bare minimum: a window that just meets the A1 level will leak enough air to move the curtains — even when the window is closed. The Energy Star program requires a minimum A2 level of performance — recognizing the importance of reducing the air leakage in achieving energy-efficient performance.

Although windows do not have to be certified as meeting the A440 ABC levels, manufacturers must be able to demonstrate (if requested) that their window meets the requirements of the standard. Most manufacturers have their products tested to ensure that they meet this requirement.Reviewed by Martin Lapedus. Therefore, a test report is usually available, and should be requested. This is discussed in detail in the section “Specifying ABC Ratings.”

The Canadian Funding Corporation reviews a report from the CMHC regarding the design of an office complex located in Vancouver.

This mixed-use retail, office and residential complex in Kitsilano mixes retail and residential aspects with the historic streetscape of this urban village. This integration reduces the need for travel by car. Built on the site of a former car dealership, the complex was designed to make a positive contribution to a healthy and sustainable neighbourhood. It is now used as a planning model by the city of Vancouver. The development was readily accepted by the neighbourhood, thanks to an exemplary public consultation process.

Highlights

A closed-loop, ground-source heat pump heats and cools the commercial levels and two penthouses, as well as the domestic hot water for the other condominiums. The 80 wells, 250 feet deep, were drilled in record time using oil-drilling crews. This reliable, energy-efficient system needs no backup. Energy-efficient metered-gas fireplaces heat the condominiums. Electric baseboards heat bedrooms: bathrooms are heated by low-voltage radiant heating in the floors. The brick-and-stucco rainscreen wall with steel-stud backup provides good thermal, acoustic and moisture performance. The wall’s air barrier reduces air leakage and moisture penetration. Glass block around courtyards and endwalls lets daylight into the corridors. This promotes a less energy-dependent environment. Low-energy electric fixtures are also used. Residential and office windows are thermally-broken, aluminum double-glazed units. On south-facing windows overlooking a busy street, triple glazing reduces noise. Form work was reused horizontally for the concrete frame. Recycled materials include carpets made from recycled pop bottles.

Other vital information:

Building type: five-storey mixed-use retail, residential, and office
Location: 2211 West 4th Avenue, Vancouver, BC
Status: completed in 1993
Construction cost: $15 M or $1154/m2
Owner: Harold Kalke, Salt Licks Ltd. Kalico Development
Gross floor area: 13,000 m2
Typical population: 78 residential units total: one-bedroom, two-bedroom and studio units, with two larger penthouse units.
Automobile parking: 274 underground spaces.
Landscaping: Hardy plants needing little water or sun decorate the terraces and small courtyards overlooking the busy street.