GBA徽标水平 Facebook LinkedIn Email Pinterest 推特 Instagram YouTube Icon 导航搜索图标 Main Search Icon Video Play Icon Plus Icon Minus Icon Picture icon Hamburger Icon Close Icon Sorted

社区and Q&A

Mold in fiberglass insulation

Nick Collins|发布General Questions

I have a lookout basement, built in 2009 in climate zone 6, currently unfinished. The above grade framed section of the lookout wall is framed with 2x6s and insulated with fiberglass batts and a poly vapor barrier on the interior side of the wall covering the fiberglass. I have noticed small dark areas in the fiberglass throughout the wall where it meets the poly sheet. The dark spots are very sporadic and appear at first glance to be mold to me, although i have not confirmed this.

假设这是一个模具问题,那么替换绝缘系统的首选方法是什么?

谢谢。

GBA Prime

加入建筑科学专家的领先社区

Become a GBA Prime member and get instant access to the latest developments in green building, research, and reports from the field.

Replies

  1. Steve Knapp CZ 3A Georgia||#1

    This article by GBA's Martin Holladay covers basement insulation (//m.etiketa4.com/blogs/dept/musings/how-insulate-basement-wall). You will note he admonishes against two common building practices: installing air permeable insulation against the basement wall and covering it with polyethylene.

  2. GBA Editor
    马丁·霍拉迪(Martin Holladay)||#2

    Nick,
    We get this question every few months. Here is a link to a Q&A Spotlight article on the topic:
    Why Is This Sheathing Moldy?

    这是有关该主题的另一个问答线程的链接:Basement insulation in Minnesota.

    The mechanism is pretty simple. Indoor air is warm and humid. The wall sheathing (and some of the insulation fibers) are cold. The walls don't have an effective air barrier, so moisture in the indoor air is able to reach cold surfaces and condense, leading to dampness and mold.

    Installing an effective interior air barrier (taped drywall) can in some cases reduce the problem. (Or it can simply hide it.)

    In general, as we've been preaching at GBA for years, the right place for insulation is on the exterior side of the wall sheathing, not the interior side of the wall sheathing. If the sheathing is warm, you won't get condensation.

  3. GBA Editor
    马丁·霍拉迪(Martin Holladay)||#3

    Nick,
    If you are willing to remove the existing moldy fiberglass, and wait for warm weather -- allowing the sheathing to warm up and dry out -- you can replace the fiberglass with closed-cell spray foam. That will solve the problem. The closed-cell spray foam is an air barrier, a vapor barrier, and an insulation with significant R-value.

  4. 乔恩·R||#4

    Here is CertainTeed's solution (replace poly with MemBrain).

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AE7vWSZHI3I

  5. GBA Editor
    马丁·霍拉迪(Martin Holladay)||#5

    乔恩·R,
    It should come as no surprise that CertainTeed (a major manufacturer of fiberglass insulation) is eager to sell fiberglass insulation.

    但是他们的视频是错误的。此方法不是“最佳实践建议”。混凝土地下壁可以从任一方向弄湿 - 与潮湿的土壤接触或潮湿的室内空气的凝结。安装膜不会在这种类型的墙中阻止霉菌。视频中的图像使我发抖。

    .

  6. Nick Collins||#6

    Thanks, I havent inspected the sheathing yet, but all of the suspected mold that i can see at this point is in between the poly sheet which is the innermost layer of the wall and the fiberglass, not between the sheathing and the fiberglass. Wouldnt the mechanism for condensation here be the warm humid outside air condensing on the relatively cool plastic sheet?

    I am thinking of pulling all of the fiberglass and spraying foam then put up drywall. Sounds like this would be an acceptable solution.

  7. GBA Editor
    马丁·霍拉迪(Martin Holladay)||#7

    Nick,
    首先,您看到的东西总是有可能不是霉菌。它可能只是污垢,也可能是无害的。

    If your basement is cool (or air conditioned during the summer), you could be looking at mold that formed when humidity in the wall assembly condensed on the chilled polyethylene.

Log in or create an account to post an answer.

社区

Recent Questions and Replies

  • |
  • |
  • |
  • |