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  1.  
    Myself and a friend are insulating the floors in my 1957 bungalow. We have the floors all removed so now the joists are visible. The insulation will be of the hard type and it will go between the joists.

    Underneath the joists are the pipes for the central heating. These currently have foam insulation probably put on in the 80s when I guess the central heating went in. It is 9 mm thick. I am planning on replacing it all with 25 mm thick foam pipe insulation mainly because I can. While I have access it seems sensible to improve this insulation.

    I'm wondering if there is anything out there that is better than the 25 mm thick foam insulation? While I have the floorboards up it would be nice to get the best possible insulation onto those pipes.
    • CommentAuthortony
    • CommentTimeApr 21st 2016
     
    None! I would lift those pipes up onto the warm side of the insulation.

    Insulation will not stop hear loss only reduce and if you need a heating system all the heat that it generates needs to go into your house not escape.
  2.  
    I agree with Tony - get the pipes into the heated envelope, however if you can't do that

    Posted By: brighton_dudeI'm wondering if there is anything out there that is better than the 25 mm thick foam insulation?

    yes 50mm of foam insulation !
    what I did whith my heating pipework unavoidably outside the heated envelope was to put 2 layers of insulation on. I found that by choosing the sizes it was possible to get another layer on the pipes.
    • CommentAuthorborpin
    • CommentTimeApr 22nd 2016
     
    Posted By: Peter_in_Hungarywhat I did whith my heating pipework unavoidably outside the heated envelope was to put 2 layers of insulation on. I found that by choosing the sizes it was possible to get another layer on the pipes.
    I'm just working on that. A thinner layer to start, followed by a thicker layer that better covers the compression fittings is the aim.

    However, the current pipe insulation sizes do not easily lend themselves to this approach :(

    Also, where do you hit the law of diminishing returns? What thickness is the sweetspot?
    • CommentAuthorgravelld
    • CommentTimeApr 22nd 2016
     
    Armaflex tends to be the leading brand spoken about, comes with an adhesive tape in the slit.

    What about that foil tape stuff? (Looks shiny from the outside) You can get some serious thickness with those.
    • CommentAuthorMarkyP
    • CommentTimeApr 22nd 2016
     
    how far below the joists are the pipes? I think the best performance for suspended timber floors is with insulation between the joists and under them if poss to remove the cold bridge through each joist. Would it be possible to insulate under the joists (mineral wool rolls or slabs) and enclose the pipework at the same time?
    • CommentAuthorGotanewlife
    • CommentTimeApr 22nd 2016 edited
     
    Posted By: borpinWhat thickness is the sweetspot?
    That's been covered somewhere here before and it relates to the dia of the pipe you are insulating - also remember IIRC that there were some thicknesses that made it worse than thinner - weird I know but pretty sure it was all calculated correctly etc. I have uses double sheathing to good effect. My gut tells me the sweet spot will hardly be much more than 25mm, certainly not 50mm.
  3.  
    The thickness that is most cost effective will, I suspect, depend upon the temperatures concerned. If you are running traditional rads at 80 deg or UHF at less than 50 then your target losses /savings will need a different thickness of insulation. Or you take the view that the cost is not so much and its a one time expense for a forever saving and go for lots.
    • CommentAuthorEd Davies
    • CommentTimeApr 22nd 2016
     
    Posted By: Gotanewlife…there were some thicknesses that made it worse than thinner - weird I know but pretty sure it was all calculated correctly etc.
    Because the increased thickness of insulation increases the surface area for the heat to get out to the air around it; for some ranges of thickness this results in more heat loss than the increased insulation saves.
    • CommentAuthorringi
    • CommentTimeApr 22nd 2016
     
    For DHW pipes, there is also the issue that heat may move into cold insinuation faster then cold air. So insulation that helps with pipes that are hot for a long time (CH) may not with hot water.
    • CommentAuthorbarney
    • CommentTimeApr 22nd 2016
     
    Roughly, you want about 30mm of insulation on domestic heating pipework (circa 0.035W/(m.K) assuming approx. 75C pipe surface temp and the void at minus 1 C - that's in still air conditions

    Adding significantly more insulation will increase the heat loss as the surface are increases faster than the insulation surface temperature decreases

    Regards

    Barney
    •  
      CommentAuthordjh
    • CommentTimeApr 23rd 2016
     
    Posted By: barneyAdding significantly more insulation will increase the heat loss as the surface are increases faster than the insulation surface temperature decreases

    Are you sure about that? Sources on the intertubes give conflicting information. There is definitely a phenomenon known as the critical radius of pipe insulation and some sources describe what you say. But others explain that starting from an uninsulated pipe, adding insulation causes the heat loss to increase for the reason you state, until it reaches the critical radius, but then adding more causes the heat loss to decrease in the usual way. I'm inclined to believe the latter explanation. The implication is that it's worse than useless putting a small amount of insulation on a pipe (for the appropriate definition of 'small' which is quite small).
    • CommentAuthorringi
    • CommentTimeApr 23rd 2016
     
    What if the insulation is covered in foil?
    •  
      CommentAuthordjh
    • CommentTimeApr 23rd 2016
     
    Posted By: ringiWhat if the insulation is covered in foil?

    If I remember correctly, one of the assumptions of the critical radius theory is that there is negligible radiative transfer.
  4.  
    K***span do a phenolic foam, foil-coated pipe sleeve in fairly fat fatnesses. Not sure what size exactly.
    • CommentAuthorEd Davies
    • CommentTimeApr 23rd 2016 edited
     
    r = radius of the pipe (m)
    λ = conductivity of the insulation material (W/m·K)
    t = thickness of the insulation material (m)
    s = surface resistance of the outer face of the insulation (m²·K/W)

    For a 1 metre length of pipe:

    Resistance of the insulation material: i(t) = ∫(r,r+t) 2πx/λ dx = (2π/λ)·(rt + t²/2)
    Resistance of the surface: S(t) = s/(2Ï€(r + t))

    Setting:
    λ = 0.030 W/m·K
    s = 0.1 m²·K/W
    r = 0.0075m (15 mm pipe)
    t = 0..0.1m (no insulation to 100 mm)

    gnuplot> l = 0.030
    gnuplot> s = 0.1
    gnuplot> r = 0.0075
    gnuplot> tp = 2*3.14159
    gnuplot> i(t) = tp/l * (r*t + t*t/2)
    gnuplot> S(t) = s/(tp * (r + t))
    gnuplot> R(t) = i(t) + S(t)
    gnuplot> plot [0:0.1] R(x)


    That seems to say that up to 30 mm you're incrementally doing harm and you have to put a lot more on to beat having no insulation at all. I don't believe that. What have I got wrong?

    Update: I think I got this wrong: i(t) = ∫(r,r+t) 2πx/λ dx. Perhaps it should be i(t) = ∫(r,r+t) 1/(λ2πx) dx or something. More thought later.
      pipe.png
    • CommentAuthorEd Davies
    • CommentTimeApr 23rd 2016
     
    Posted By: djhIf I remember correctly, one of the assumptions of the critical radius theory is that there is negligible radiative transfer.
    I don't think it matters to the theory - it's just wrapped up in the effective surface resistance when you come to work out the numbers for your case.
    • CommentAuthorEd Davies
    • CommentTimeApr 23rd 2016
     
    Yep, I'm fairly sure that the insulation resistance should be:

    i(t) = ∫(r,r+t) 1/(λ2πx) dx

    Less confidently, I think the definite integral should be: 1/(2πλ)[ln(r+t) - ln(r)].

    With the previous assumed values the resistance increases continuously with thickness. Doubling the surface resistance to 0.2 m²·K/W (maybe by adding Ringi's foil) and increasing the conductivity of the insulation to 0.050 W/m²·K gives a little dip a few mm wide before more insulation starts to increase resistance.

    Red line: resistance due to insulation.
    Green line: resistance due to outer surface.
    Blue line: total resistance.

    So, unless I've made a further upcock, this indicates that this effect is real, works the way DJH remembers (reduction is in the first part of the insulation increase) but for practical purposes is irrelevant. Add mhor insultation.

    pipe.plt;

    #!/usr/bin/gnuplot -p

    set terminal png size 450,300
    set output 'pipe.png'

    l = 0.050
    s = 0.2
    r = 0.0075
    tp = 2*3.14159
    i(t) = 1/(tp*l) * (log(r+t)-log(r))
    S(t) = s/(tp * (r + t))
    R(t) = i(t) + S(t)
    plot [0:0.1] i(x), S(x), R(x)
      pipe2.png
    •  
      CommentAuthordjh
    • CommentTimeApr 23rd 2016
     
    Sorry, I'm not motivated enough to check references at the moment, but I don't think the effect is solely due to surface resistance. It's because the heat flow isn't uniform throughout the volume of the insulation; the flow lines aren't parallel.
    • CommentAuthorRobL
    • CommentTimeApr 23rd 2016
     
    I had a go independantly on paper then plotted with excel - I think I ended up with exactly the same formula as you Ed -

    1/Loss = 1/(2.pi.L)*[(log(R/r)/lambda + 1/R.Kair]
    Where R is outer radius, r is pipe radius, Kair is 10W/m^2.degC, lamda = 0.04W/m.degC

    As the pipe gets thinner the wierd effect gets much more noticeable - that is, an 8mm diameter pipe in still air needs 30mm OD of insulation or more to be better than bare pipe, while a 2mm hot object is virtually impossible to insulate usefully. A 15mm diameter pipe just shows the effect- any thicker and the effect is gone.

    It's maybe relevent for solar thermal installations, as they tend to have super thin pipes. I suppose the insulation there serves 2 purposes though - whilst the insulation on our indoor ST pipes may be useless from a heat loss perspective, we don't want exposed potentially 100degC pipework.

    If it's right, what about thin electrical cables running in free air versus in insulation? Conventional wisdom says you should be cautious of covering them, in case they overheat. Maybe that's a safe oversimplification.

    Hopefully there's a pic attached...
      pipeinsulation.PNG
    •  
      CommentAuthordjh
    • CommentTimeApr 23rd 2016
     
    Posted By: RobLIf it's right, what about thin electrical cables running in free air versus in insulation?

    I read something about that at some point. Electrical cables aren't normally exposed; they are normally insulated. And the electrical insulation also acts as thermal insulation, and its thickness is chosen to be close to the critical radius so it has least effect on current-carrying capacity.
    • CommentAuthorEd Davies
    • CommentTimeApr 23rd 2016
     
    Thanks Rob. Yes, our formulas look the same. It took my a while to work out how your log(R/r) is the same as my ln(r+t) - ln(r). Doh! That's what logarithms were invented for. It's getting late. Nice generalization to look at the different pipe sizes and something worth bearing in mind.
  5.  
    If the OP still has 1980s foam insulation, then s/he doesn't have mice! Our pipes were deinsulated within a couple of years by beasties under the floor making off with nest material. Now trying foil-covered wool, preformed 1m lengths, nice to work with, much cheaper online than at insulation merchant, self adhesive flap covers slit. Too early to tell whether the mice like it.

    Was struck by the graphs: 1) what a lot of Watts of heat is lost from my pipes, in relation to windows walls etc 2) how little improvement the pipe insulation gives, even the thick stuff.
    • CommentAuthorborpin
    • CommentTimeApr 24th 2016
     
    Posted By: RobLI had a go independantly on paper then plotted with excel
    Could you post the Excel file?
    • CommentAuthorRobL
    • CommentTimeApr 24th 2016 edited
     
    Hi Borpin - Maybe this will work- attempts to send the .xls directly failed, but if I zip it?

    edit - Wahey, seems to be there :-)
    • CommentAuthorEd Davies
    • CommentTimeApr 24th 2016
     
    Posted By: djhIt's because the heat flow isn't uniform throughout the volume of the insulation; the flow lines aren't parallel.
    We're assuming an ideal insulator (conductivity doesn't change with temperature, heat flux or direction as it would in a real insulator because of convection in the little cells) but we are taking the basic geometry of the higher heat flux (W/m²) in the inner bit into account.
  6.  
    From the graph posted by RobL it would appear that more insulation always results in a saving of heat once you are past the first thin layer of insulation and it also shows that for 15mm pipe the 10mm poly-foam insulation widely available here is still on the steep slope and doubling it to 20mm (radius=27mm) gives almost linear savings/mm

    However what the graph also shows is that the cost effectiveness of any thickness of insulation varies with the size of pipe - the bigger the pipe the thicker the insulation layer can be used before the loss line flattens significantly.

    I would be interested to see the graph extended to include 22mm pipe (typical CH pipe) and 28mm and 35mm (typical for boiler/TS installations) for those of us with boiler houses outside the heated envelope.
  7.  
    There's a lesson for installation here as well. I've got a hot water recirculation loop. It's all within the insulated envelope but of course is wasted heat in summer. I'd planned to heavily insulate the pipes but of course when I came to do it I found the outbound and return had been installed close together, and in many places attached to the wall with pipe clips which meant it was impossible to use insulation thicker than the standard 10mm polyfoam.

    If I was doing it again I'd ask for wider spacing and set off surfaces so thicker insulation could be used.
    • CommentAuthorEd Davies
    • CommentTimeApr 24th 2016 edited
     
    We're also neglecting the emissivity of the surfaces. Presumably bare clean copper would have a lower emissivity than grey foam, at least until the copper goes green or whatever. On the other hand, foil wrapping would probably swing things in the opposite direction.

    Posted By: Peter_in_HungaryI would be interested to see the graph extended to include 22mm pipe
    Even with the high insulation conductivity (0.050 W/m·K) and high surface resistance (0.2 m²·K/W) I used the effect all but disappears even for 18 mm pipe. For the first few mm adding more insulation doesn't increase the overall resistance much but it doesn't decrease it much, either.

    Once you get to 22 mm pipe the graph's firmly upwards from the start.

    18 mm pipe (9 mm radius, expanded horizontal scale so only showing the first 10 mm:

    #!/usr/bin/gnuplot -p

    set terminal png size 450,300
    set output 'pipe.png'

    l = 0.050
    s = 0.2
    r = 0.009
    tp = 2*3.14159
    i(t) = 1/(tp*l) * (log(r+t)-log(r))
    S(t) = s/(tp * (r + t))
    R(t) = i(t) + S(t)
    plot [0:0.01] i(x), S(x), R(x)

    Blue: total resistance
    Red: insulation resistance
    Green: surface resistance
      pipe3.png
  8.  
    Posted By: tonyNone! I would lift those pipes up onto the warm side of the insulation.

    Insulation will not stop hear loss only reduce and if you need a heating system all the heat that it generates needs to go into your house not escape.


    Unfortunately it is not possible for me to put the pipes onto the warm side of the insulation. I have to insulate between the joists, there is only about five inches of space beneath the joists and that must be kept clear. I cannot put the pipes between the joists or through the joists.

    I am installing ThermaSkirt which I have found has the advantage of shortening the pipes under the floor in my situation.
   
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