JGinther
Zip-tie engineer
I was recently informed by local government officials that if I am planning on installing a heated slab outside of a building, new energy code requirements mandate the use of foam 'boards' made of polystyrene to be installed on grade and then the concrete poured on top.
While I do not argue the energy efficiency in the case of building heat, where you are heating the slab to higher temperatures than the natural subsurface ground temperature, I think that the requirement in the case of a car wash where the slab is CONSTANTLY kept at just above freezing merits some actual thought.
My thoughts are that if the subsurface geothermal temperatures are around 40 degrees, that heat energy is moving up and then being sucked away from the colder atmospheric temperatures above the surface (Energy only moves from hot to cold). So that heat energy is slowly going into the slab, then leaving into the air. An underslab insulation board would simply slow down that process. So if the temperature of the heated slab is kept at 34 degrees, and the subsoil is naturally at a higher 40 degrees, there would be no point in installing the insulation board and it would actually work as a detriment. However, if you were heating the slab to 80 degrees, which is far above the earth temperature below, then you would be loosing heat to the earth also, and would then be assisted by the use of insulation to keep the heat where it is useful.
Am I missing something? Also curious if others who have poured on top of insulation have had structural problems with the slab thought to be attributable to the foam board.
Thanks for your thoughts!
While I do not argue the energy efficiency in the case of building heat, where you are heating the slab to higher temperatures than the natural subsurface ground temperature, I think that the requirement in the case of a car wash where the slab is CONSTANTLY kept at just above freezing merits some actual thought.
My thoughts are that if the subsurface geothermal temperatures are around 40 degrees, that heat energy is moving up and then being sucked away from the colder atmospheric temperatures above the surface (Energy only moves from hot to cold). So that heat energy is slowly going into the slab, then leaving into the air. An underslab insulation board would simply slow down that process. So if the temperature of the heated slab is kept at 34 degrees, and the subsoil is naturally at a higher 40 degrees, there would be no point in installing the insulation board and it would actually work as a detriment. However, if you were heating the slab to 80 degrees, which is far above the earth temperature below, then you would be loosing heat to the earth also, and would then be assisted by the use of insulation to keep the heat where it is useful.
Am I missing something? Also curious if others who have poured on top of insulation have had structural problems with the slab thought to be attributable to the foam board.
Thanks for your thoughts!