Hygrothermal Behaviour and Building Pathologies

2021 ◽  
2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martti-Jaan Miljan ◽  
◽  
Rain Allikmäe ◽  
Andres Jürgenson ◽  
Matis Miljan ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 321 ◽  
pp. 157-164
Author(s):  
Jan Bubeník ◽  
Jiří Zach

Currently, the use of board materials as a material intended for the dry construction of building structure cladding in the building industry has become widespread. The most common types of board materials include wood-based boards (particle, fibre, laminated / plywood, oriented strand boards [OSB]), cement-bonded particleboards and gypsum plasterboards or gypsum fibre boards. In the case of board materials based on inorganic binders, these are most often represented by boards in which the fillers used are bonded by plaster or cement. Wood can then be used as filler, which is predominantly an assortment of inferior-quality trees or comes from a short rotation coppice, treated by various technological processes. Microstructure and material composition have the greatest influence on the physical and mechanical properties of the boards. The use of the boards in the internal or external environment is determined by their individual properties. Another indicator for the possible use of boards is the form of moisture with which the board comes into contact after installation into the structure. For the external environment, the boards have to withstand mainly liquid moisture; in contrast, in an internal environment, the boards come into contact mainly with air humidity. The diffusion properties of the individual products are also crucial for the overall design and use of the boards for structure cladding.


2020 ◽  
Vol 172 ◽  
pp. 07003
Author(s):  
Klaus Viljanen ◽  
Xiaoshu Lü ◽  
Jari Puttonen

This article presents long-term experimental studies on the moisture safety in the ventilation cavities of highly insulated (HI) structures. The tested HI-walls had thermal transmittances of 0.11-0.13 W/m2K. A wall with a thermal transmittance of 0.23 W/m2K represented the baseline wall in the test. In addition to walls, an HI-roof of a newly built house with a U-value of 0.08 W/m2K was measured. The results indicate that, in the ventilation cavity, the relative humidity of an HI-wall exceeds 1-7% of the humidity measured from the baseline wall during winter, which coincides with the 0.4-1.5ºC lower temperatures observed in the HI-walls. The mold risk in the ventilation cavities of the walls is low, as the value of the mold index (MI) remains below one, which indicates small amounts of microscopic mold only on surfaces. However, at the bottom of the cavity, the MI value reaches 1.4 due to lower temperatures. In the HI-roof, the MI values are between 1.0 and 2.0 in the middle of the cavity in winter. The reasons for the higher mold risk of the roof are the humid weather, the built-in moisture of the roof and the low heat flux from inside. The study confirms that, in the future, warmer weather and increased humidity can increase moisture risks in the ventilation cavities. The results support the use of materials that are more resistant to mold in the outer parts of structures.


2015 ◽  
Vol 365 ◽  
pp. 172-177
Author(s):  
V.P. de Freitas ◽  
João M.P.Q. Delgado ◽  
N. Machado

Wood has a strong hygroscopic behaviour, with a strong variation of moisture content and dimension stability caused by modifications of the relative humidity of the surrounding air. The properties that define the behaviour of wood facing temperature and moisture actions were studied in this work. Linear thermal expansion, hygroscopicity, shrinkage (tangential and radial shrinkage coefficient) and hygric expansion were given special attention.An experimental device was designed for testing wood samples, red oak. A series of tests was performed including the determination of hygric expansion coefficient and the definition of the sorption curve. This research made possible the evaluation of dimensional stability of wood in transient conditions of relative humidity.


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