Water vapor can pass through building materials in several ways including direct transmission and by heat transfer but studies suggest that fully 98 percent of the moisture transfer through walls occurs through air gaps including cracks around electrical fixtures and outlets and gaps along baseboards.
Vapor transmission through ceiling to attic.
Thanks for some very informative posts by all.
Determine where vents will be located.
The science of moisture movement.
Multiply by the appropriate factor from table 1 below to learn the total gross vent area needed.
The intent of this brief is to provide code related information about controlling moisture in unvented attics by installing a vapor diffusion port vent that would convey water vapor from an unvented attic to the outside when air permeable insulation materials are installed and can be verified as being in compliance with the related codes and standards for residential construction.
Lastly i am curious about the recommendation on your blog to reverse the ceiling fans to decrease the radiant heat transmitted from the attic through the ceiling.
The vapor barrier is always installed facing the heated side of the wall or ceiling because that s where the moisture is coming from.
Insulation and exit the attic through the roof vents.
Divide this number by either 150 no vapor retarder or by 300 vapor retarder in place.
Standard batts and high performance batts can be used under floors.
So it certainly makes sense that that vapor would rapidly diffuse through the foam and make the attic even more humid once the sun hits the roof deck.
Thus installing vapor barriers on wall surfaces must.
So compared to that hot humid attic the vapor pressure at the other side of the foam is a factor of six higher.
When insulating floors over unheated basements or crawl spaces faced products should be used and vapor retarders should face heated areas and be in.
Floor insulation can also help with sound transmission so it can make sense to use it even between two conditioned spaces.
In the old days in severely cold climates where attics were poorly insulated it was okay to omit a plastic ceiling vapor barrier.
That is a new one on me.
If it is and you plan to provide heating and cooling to the finished attic space you need to remove.
For instance the building code s ratio of one square foot of open ventilation area to 300 square feet of attic square footage assumes a vapor barrier is installed between the ceiling and the attic space to retard the migration of moisture vapor into the attic.