Green Building Bible, Fourth Edition |
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These two books are the perfect starting place to help you get to grips with one of the most vitally important aspects of our society - our homes and living environment. PLEASE NOTE: A download link for Volume 1 will be sent to you by email and Volume 2 will be sent to you by post as a book. |
Vanilla 1.0.3 is a product of Lussumo. More Information: Documentation, Community Support.
Posted By: renewablejohnreferring to old buildings which breathe rather than have a vapour barrierThat's a false distinction - Old buildings may be retrofitted with vapour barriers, conversely new buildings can be designed to be safe without vapour barriers.
Posted By: tonyWater vapour moves from areas of higher partial vapour pressure to places where there is lower partial vapour pressure. When or where dew point is reached condensation will occurTrue - but both new and old buildings can be configured so that dew point is never reached, or is safely transitory, even without vapour barrier - that's what WUFI modelling is for. And if that configuration is done right (i.e. the arrangement of layers/thicknesses of different materials, relative to local climate data) then a no-vapour-barrier system is far safer and more robust longterm than one that relies on vapour barrier which is hard to install faultlessly, fragile, deteriorating and disruptable.
Posted By: fostertomVapour barrier or not, and MHRV or not, are completely independent - neither has any significant bearing on the other.
Posted By: djhto run a WUFI model, you need to set boundary conditionsNot a lot of choice in that? Weather file for the location has to be valid but can't be fudged. Choice of BS or other standard model for how internal RH follows external - several options but all goodish. What else? Lots of sweaty occupants constantly taking showers?
Posted By: fostertomPosted By: djhto run a WUFI model, you need to set boundary conditionsNot a lot of choice in that? Weather file for the location has to be valid but can't be fudged. Choice of BS or other standard model for how internal RH follows external - several options but all goodish. What else? Lots of sweaty occupants constantly taking showers?
Posted By: tonyDamage to wood based structure can occur if they get damp
The problem is not with RH but with partial vapour pressure.
Even air with low RH indoors when moved to a cooler place can hit dew point.
Posted By: djhDewpoint is the point at which water condenses at the same rate it evaporatesI never knew that, as a definition - makes much sense.
Posted By: djhDewpoint is the point at which water condenses at the same rate it evaporates.Strictly, over a flat surface of pure water.
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