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Author
Richards, R. F. | Burch, D. M. | Thomas, W. C.
Title
Water Vapor Sorption Measurements of Common Building Materials.
Coporate
National Institute of Standards and Technology, Gaithersburg, MD Virginia Polytechnic Inst., Blacksburg
Journal
ASHRAE Transactions, Vol. 98, No. Part 2, 475-485, 1992
Sponsor
Department of Energy, Washington, DC
Report
BA-92-6-1,
Book or Conf
American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning Engineers, Inc. (ASHRAE). Annual Meeting, 1992. Technical and Symposium Papers. June 27-July 1, 1992, ASHRAE, Atlanta, GA, Baltimore, MD, 1992
Keywords
water vapor | building materials | salt water | moisture content | humidity | sorption measurements | siding
Abstract
Sorption isotherm measurements were carried out for common building materials. The measurements were made by placing small specimens of the materials in pint-size jars above saturated salt-in-water solutions that gave various ambient relative humidities. The jars were kept at constant temperature until the enclosed specimens reached their steady-state equilibrium moisture content. The equilibrium moisture content plotted versus ambient relative humidity at a given temperature gave the sorption isotherm. Separate sorption isotherms were obtained for specimens initally dry (adsorption isotherm) and for specimens initially saturated (desorption isotherm). The materials included sugar pine, southern pine, exterior-grade plywood, waferboard siding, oriented strand board, particleboard, fiberboard sheathing, sturdy-brace fiberboard, kraft paper, foam-core sheathing, plain gypsum board, and vinyl-covered gypsum board. The sorption measurements were compared to other measurements reported in the literature. Data from the present work were found to lie below many of the previously reported sorption measurements. However, the bias is small, less than 0.05 kg/kg in all cases where equilibrium moisture contents ranged from 0 to 0.30 kg/kg. The use of desiccant drying in this study versus oven drying in previous studies is examined as a possible explanation.