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Conditioned Attics Save Energy
in Hot Climates
Do homes with vented attics use less cooling energy than homes with
unvented, conditioned attics in hot climates? With little formal research
available to answer the question, common wisdom and most building codes
have favored venting. But a recent field study in Las Vegas challenges
existing assumptions about the virtues of venting in hot, humid climates.
The study shows that moving the thermal and air barrier from the plane
of the ceiling to the sloped roof plane improves airtightness and can save
cooling energy by eliminating heat gain to ducts located in the attic.
Curbing Condensation
Joseph Lstiburek of the Building Science Corporation (BSC) in Chestnut
Hill, Massachusetts was the primary researcher for the Las Vegas study.
He said that one goal of the study was to validate observations of energy
savings at homes and schools that BSC had retrofitted in Florida and Hawaii
to eliminate moisture problems. The buildings had leaky ducts and air handlers
in vented attics that caused the buildings to be depressurized. In hot
climates, negative pressures in the house cause infiltration of warm, moist
air from outside. This led to mold growth throughout the house. Having
given up on getting large builders to install tight ducts, Lstiburek decided
to do the next best thing--put the ducts inside the conditioned space.
The retrofits (sealing the attic vents and insulating at the roof deck)
solved the moisture problems because, with the ducts leaking only to the
inside, the houses were no longer depressurized. They also showed reduced
energy use. According to Lstiburek, having the duct system within the conditioned
space saved more energy than was used to condition the attic.
To confirm these results, Lstiburek and Armin Rudd of the Florida Solar
Energy Center designed a computer model to describe what was happening,
which they then tested with real data from the Las Vegas study.
The Las Vegas Study
The field study was performed on three houses in a Las Vegas subdivision.
Two of the houses had attics with roof air barriers of sheathing, along
with R-30 fiberglass batt insulation under the plywood roof deck. The third
house (the study control) had a conventional vented attic with insulation
above the ceiling gypsum board. The three houses had the same floor plan,
elevations, and orientation.
The researchers installed temperature sensors at several locations and
elevations--from the roof tile top to the inside air space--to record temperatures
throughout the day. They measured air conditioner energy use at the compressor
units, and performed air leakage tests for each home. Lstiburek and Rudd
then analyzed the monitoring data for two weekend days on which the outside
temperature peaked at 92°E The days also had similar solar radiation
peaks.
Even though the maximum temperatures recorded at the bottom of the plywood
roof deck were higher in some instances for the conditioned attics than
for the vented attic, air leakage rates and energy consumption were significantly
less in the conditioned attic homes. The duct systems for the sealed attic
houses had no measurable air leakage via the attic to the outdoors. There
was also reduced heat gain to the ducts, since the attic was now cooled
along with the house. The two conditioned-attic houses used an average
of 19% less cooling energy than the vented-attic house.
Lstiburek and Rudd used these data to calibrate their computer model,
which compares space-conditioning energy use and roof temperatures in hot
climates for homes with vented attics and conditioned attics (see Figure
1). The model also incorporated extensive laboratory test data on the
ways in which conditioned attic space and venting affect temperatures in
the attic, roof, and roof deck. These test data were provided by William
Rose of the Building Research Council at the University of Illinois.
Annual simulation results for Las Vegas showed that, compared to a vented
attic, an unvented, conditioned attic could save 4% on space-conditioning
energy assuming no duct leakage. However, when modeled with typical duct
leakage (10% return leak and 5% supply leak), the conditioned attic could
save 10% on space-conditioning energy.
In addition to energy savings, Lstiburek noted that conditioned attics
also reduce pressurization and depressurization problems associated with
opening and closing doors to interior rooms. The attic acts as a pressurization
equalization system for the house. Much of the air leakage in houses built
in the South is between the house and the attic, and this leakage is eliminated
by conditioning the attic. Thus, if a bedroom has a supply register in
it and the door is closed, the air can travel through the attic to the
rest of the house, instead of pressurizing the bedroom. The balanced pressure
eliminates uncontrolled air leakage, backdrafting of gas appliances, and
soil gas infiltration.
Contending with Codes
Traditionally, building codes in most locations require vented attics
in houses. Lstiburek has been battling the general assumption among building
officials that homes with vented attics use less cooling energy than those
with unvented, conditioned attics. For instance, the Florida code now allows
the option of a conditioned attic; however, it requires a higher level
of insulation in the conditioned attic.
Lstiburek expects that "building codes will eventually be rewritten
to reflect [the Las Vegas] findings." He says that the building department
in Las Vegas waived their venting requirement when he showed them the results
of the study. The builder of the 100-home Las Vegas subdivision where the
study was performed is using unvented conditioned attics for the entire
development.
When to Vent
The benefits of having ducts in conditioned space also apply to cold
and mixed climates. But in these climates attics must be vented. In 1995,
Rose tested attic construction in which the insulation was placed along
the underside of the roof sheathing with various venting configurations.
With a conditioned attic space, Rose found that "energy transfer through
the ductwork, both convective and conductive, is no longer a loss to the
exterior," while "air-tightness requirements for the ceiling plane are
reduced or eliminated." However, for moisture control, Rose concluded that
having an air chute to maintain an air gap between the sheathing and the
top of the insulation is critical for keeping the sheathing dry.
Lstiburek recommends completely unvented attic assemblies only for hot
climates with mild winters. These areas include Florida; the southern parts
of Louisiana, Alabama, Mississippi, and Texas; and the southern tips of
California and Arizona. Homes in areas with cool or cold winters should
vent the roof to avoid moisture problems and prevent the formation of ice
dams (see "Out, Out, Dammed Ice," HE Nov/Dec
'96, p. 21).
--Ted Rieger
Ted Rieger is a freelance writer based in Sacramento,
California, who specializes in energy issues |