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Moisture Transport

Date post: 02-Jan-2016
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Moisture Transport. Quantitatively and qualitatively describe transport by Liquid flow Capillary suction Air movement Vapor diffusion. Capillary Suction. Paper towel example What makes a good capillary medium? Small pores (but not sealed) Small contact angle (hydrophilic) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Moisture Transport Quantitatively and qualitatively describe transport by 1. Liquid flow 2. Capillary suction 3. Air movement 4. Vapor diffusion
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Page 1: Moisture Transport

Moisture Transport

• Quantitatively and qualitatively describe transport by

1. Liquid flow

2. Capillary suction

3. Air movement

4. Vapor diffusion

Page 2: Moisture Transport

Capillary Suction

• Paper towel example• What makes a good capillary medium?

• Small pores (but not sealed)• Small contact angle (hydrophilic)

• What is the driving force?• Surface tension

• Units on surface tension? • Is surface tension a function of temperature?

• Is it only a liquid phenomena?Ref: Carey (1992) Liquid-Vapor Phase-Change Phenomena

Page 3: Moisture Transport

Capillary Action (quantitative)

• Liquid water• Water moves from big capillary pores to small

capillary pores

• Water vapor (at equilibrium)• s = ρRTln

• Temperature does influence vapor motion through capillary pores

• Capillary vapor transport is from high T to low T

Page 4: Moisture Transport

How do we stop capillary action?

• Get rid of the moisture source

• Make the pores bigger• Capillary break

• Seal the pores

• Give the water someplace else to go

Page 5: Moisture Transport

Stopping Capillary Suction Below Grade

• Bituminous liquid (tar-like material) to seal pores on exterior of foundation• Does not span big cracks

• Gravel around foundation (with below grade drain)

• Install capillary breaks• Air gaps, insulation gaps

Page 6: Moisture Transport

Stopping Capillary Suction Above Grade

• Paint

• Caulk small air gaps• Disadvantages?

• Make large air gaps (vented) between siding and wall and between shingles and roof decking

• Use building paper or bricks or other material to absorb moisture

Page 7: Moisture Transport

Air Movement

• Simplest form of vapor transport

• Driving force?• Air moves from high pressure to low pressure• Pressure increases with temperature (IGL)

• Flow is from high temperature to low temperature

OH

airWQV

2

Page 8: Moisture Transport

Source Control

• Exhaust ventilation• Bathrooms, kitchens, dryers, unvented combustion,

wood storage, construction materials

• Condensate drainage• Vapor-diffusion barrier

• Dilution

• Dehumidification

Page 9: Moisture Transport

How to Stop Air Movement

• Air retarders

• Air sealing• Caulk and foam• Dense-pack cellulose insulation

• DO NOT FORGET ABOUT VENTILATION

Page 10: Moisture Transport

Vapor Diffusion

• Movement of water vapor from high concentration to low concentration• Mechanism is random molecular motion

• Some materials are impermeable to vapor diffusion

• Other materials retard vapor transmission

Page 11: Moisture Transport

Governing Equation For Diffusion

• w water vapor flux [M/t/A, kg/s/m2]

• µ permeability [perms∙in, perm = grain/(hr∙ft2∙in Hg)]• Permeance [ng/(s·m2·Pa)]

• p is water vapor pressure

• x is distance along flow path

• Water diffuses from high vapor pressure to low vapor pressure

• Permeability is a function of temperature in materials• Very ugly non-linear relationship

x

pw

d

d

Page 12: Moisture Transport

Permeability and Resistance

• ASHRAE ch. 25 Table 9• What has greater average permeability?

• Brick• Concrete• Aluminum foil• Air• Polyethylene• Latex enamel paint• Latex primer/sealer paint

Page 13: Moisture Transport

Average Permeability

Material Average Permeability [ng/(s·m·Pa)]

Aluminum foil 2.6 × 10-5

Polyethylene 4.6 × 10-5

Latex enamel paint 1.1 × 10-2

Latex primer/sealer paint 2.2 × 10-2

Brick 4.6Concrete 4.7

Air 174

Page 14: Moisture Transport

More questions

• Does permeability or permeance matter?

• How do you measure permeability/permeance?• Wet-cup/dry-cup tests

• What is a vapor-barrier/ vapor-retarder?

• How do tears, voids, gaps affect vapor-retarder performance?• Is this the same as for air barriers?

Page 15: Moisture Transport

Protecting against Vapor Diffusion

• Above grade• Use a vapor retarder

• Interior in heating climates– Caveat about cladding moisture

• Exterior in cooling climates

• But, what happens in the “other” season?

• And, what happens when moisture does get into the building assemblies?• “Smart” retarders

1. Impermeable to vapor, but “permeable” to liquid

2. Low permeability at low RH, high permeability at high RH

Page 16: Moisture Transport

Protecting against Vapor Diffusion

• Below grade• Damp proofing• Vapor diffusion retarders on different surfaces• Insulation on exterior of foundation

Page 17: Moisture Transport

Moisture Modeling

• Thus far, largely qualitative analysis• In order to make informed decisions need to do

quantitative analysis• Challenges/barriers

• Building assemblies are not well characterized• Discontinuity between design and construction phase• Modeling liquid water flow is practically impossible

and not particularly desirable• Very expensive to do completely

Page 18: Moisture Transport

Strategies for Modeling

Strategy 1• Assume that only one water transport method is

active• Back of the envelope calculation to figure out which

method is the most important

• Combined thermal and moisture transport calculations

• Usually assume equilibrium, 1-D transport

Page 19: Moisture Transport

Detailed Modeling

• Strategy 21. Divide building materials into small volumes

2. Consider all transport mechanisms and calculate liquid and vapor transport to and from each volume

3. Simultaneous energy, mass balances for each volume including phase change

• Computationally intensive• Requires

• Material properties

• Excellent geometric description

Page 20: Moisture Transport

Example of Strategy 1

• New building• Verified construction to limit liquid water entry• Foundation/cladding designed to eliminate

capillary suction• ADA verified with blower door testing• Interested in steady-state moisture transport

Page 21: Moisture Transport

Review of Heat Transfer

• For series heat flow

W

Cm

BTU

FfthrR

m

W

fthr

BTUq

R

Tq

22

22,,,,

total

i

total

i

R

R

T

T

q = heat flux (heat flow)

ΔT = Temperature difference

R = thermal resistivity

Page 22: Moisture Transport

Series Moisture Transfer

rep

permZ

Z

P

x

pw

1,

d

dtotal

i

total

i

Z

Z

P

P

ΔP = water vapor pressure difference

Z = Diffusion resistance

Page 23: Moisture Transport
Page 24: Moisture Transport
Page 25: Moisture Transport
Page 26: Moisture Transport

If Condensation Occurs

• Set vapor pressure to saturation pressure at most likely point

• Divide wall into two sections

• Use relationship on each side of condensation

• Recalculate vapor pressures

total

i

total

i

Z

Z

P

P

Page 27: Moisture Transport

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