WREN INDUSTRIES and
The History and Science of
Foil Insulation in Australia
Tim Renouf Jan 2007
A Little History
Wren Industries is a family owned business,
based in Melbourne, Victoria. It commenced trading in 1991 and is operated by
Tim Renouf. Wren manufactures two aluminium foil radiant heat barrier
insulation products – CONCERTINA
FOIL BATTS and RENSHADE. The Renouf family have been involved in
the manufacture, marketing and sales of foil insulations since the early
1950’s.
The story begins with Ted Renouf when he started
his career as a salesman for Sisalkraft Australia(part USA owned), in a branch
office in North Melbourne in the early 1950’s. Sisalkraft sold bitumen
laminated paper to the packaging and building industry and as a sarking
material under sheet and tiled roofs. In 1953 a roll of reflective foil laminate
arrived from the USA as a potential new product.
Ted’s interest was ignited and he approached
the CSIRO at the Division of Building Research in Highett, Melbourne where Dr.
Roy Muncey confirmed that aluminium foil had in fact remarkable insulating
properties previously not seen in Australia. At that time there was only one
form of insulation on the market, a fibrous bulk insulation called Rockwool, a
product made from blown melted rock.
Dr Muncey confirmed that one layer of
aluminium foil, in a ceiling with a
100mm downward facing airspace, had the
equivalent thermal resistance (R-value) heat
flow down to approximately 100mm
(4 inches) rockwool fibre insulation. But
the same foil airspace heat flow up
was equal to approximately one third to one half of the down value, i.e.
horizontal foil had much greater thermal resistance in summer than winter.
However, in walls, vertical foil achieved maximum resistance with minimum 20mm
adjoining airspaces and gave the same R-value sideways - heat flow in or out, summer and winter – and this was
equivalent to approximately 50mm of rockwool.
Armed with this knowledge, Ted went out and sold that very first roll of aluminium foil in
September 1953 to the St.John’s
Catholic Church, Maroondah Hwy, Mitcham, a suburb of Melbourne, for use under a
curved ‘Nissan hut’ roof to give relief from summer radiant heat. The brand name Sisalation was born at that
time - a new insulation product comprising reinforcing mesh (Sisal fibre) used
in the lamination of bitumen adhesive with paper and foil.
By 1961 reflective foil laminate was
rapidly gaining acceptance in the Australian market as both a cost efficient
and effective insulation and sarking material. Seeing an opportunity to expand,
in July 1961 Ted Renouf and an associate, Bill Broadhurst, took the plunge and
struck out on their own starting a new company manufacturing foil insulation –
Renhurst Industries P/L.
Renhurst grew rapidly and the product name RENFOIL was soon being specified
by architects across Australia for use in industrial, commercial and
residential buildings in roofs, ceilings, walls and floors.
New products were added to the range – RENTHENE
(waterproof underlay for concrete),
FIBRE-WOOL (the first cellulose
bulk insulation in Australia to compete against the new bulk insulation that
had entered into the insulation market – fibre-glass), RIPPLEFOIL and RIPPLESOUND - a new range of aluminium roof
lining products.
In1969 Renhurst was sold to Reed Consolidated (a large UK based paper
company) and after the expiration of his three year contract Ted left the
industry. Reed subsequently sold the company to James Hardie – an emerging
building based company who ran the business until 1986 whereupon it was sold to
the market leading bulk fibre-glass insulation company ACI Fibre-Glass. (ACI
had acquired the foil laminating plant of St Regis a few years earlier and saw
the acquisition of Renhurst as a strategic move to eliminate a competitor and
secure market share). ACI closed the laminating plant and sold what assets were
remaining to a new company Renhurst Ceilings P/L which continues to this day manufacturing
the product range RIPPLESOUND, RIPPLEFOIL and RIPPLETONE
to markets across
Australia and around the world. These products can be found at – www.renhurst.com
In 1982, and after 10 years out of the
industry, Ted re-entered the aluminium foil insulation market with a new company
– Renouf Industries P/L with his two sons Mike and Tim and together they
invented a new style of lightweight
reflective foil insulation. This company brought new technology to the
industry and was eventually sold to Gang-Nail Australia Ltd (now MiTek
Australia Ltd) in 1990.
In 1992 Ted came out of retirement to start yet another company, Wren
Industries P/L, sourcing a specially made product from Gang-Nail Australia for
a revolutionary new concept
– CONCERTINA FOIL BATTS followed by RENSHADE
in 2000.
A Little Science
Australia has very different climates and energy
consumption requirements where winters are much milder and shorter in duration
and hot climates exist over the entire continent. The majority of Australia’s
population live in climates where radiant heat flow into buildings dominates
over heat escape or there is a mixed dual climate - hot and cold, i.e. locations
experiencing both mild winters and hot summers being most capital cities and along
much of the eastern coast. Only a minority of people live in winter dominated
climates.
Hot climatic conditions and high external
radiation levels exist across all of Australia, where roofs have recorded
downward radiating surfaces of 80-100degC, causing roof spaces to be typically
50-70degC. External walls and glazing are
also affected. Accordingly, insulation materials need to demonstrate thermal
resistance against the effects of inward solar radiant heat gain on buildings
as well as winter heat loss.
Types of Insulation
There are basically two different types of
thermal insulation – reflective foil and bulk insulation.
Reflective
Aluminium foil insulation, with an adjoining
airspace, will provide a permanent and continuous barrier to radiation – a
direct result provided by the properties of aluminium - of high reflection (97%) and very low
emissivity (3%) or re-radiation. For example, an aluminium coffee pot cannot
reflect the heat of the coffee because of conduction, however the outward
facing aluminium surface radiates very little heat.
Same story with a hot chicken wrapped with
aluminium foil. NB: Both shiny and dull aluminium surfaces have the same
thermal characteristics.
Foil insulations are expressed only as
“Total R-values” between indoor and outdoor air, eg brickwork walls to internal
plasterboard, roofs to ceilings, framed floors to ground level. The benefits of foil insulation include thermal resistance,
waterproofing-sarking, condensation and vapour control.
Bulk
The first commercially made bulk thermal
insulation occurred in Australia in 1933 with rockwool batts (volcanic rock
fibre). Loose-fill cellulose insulation (granulated paper) came onto the market
in the mid-1960’s. Then in the late 1960’s, fibreglass batt insulation was
developed to produce better recovery
and loft (memory) after compression
in packaging, compared to rockwool. Polyester batts and wool combinations
entered the market during the 1990’s as low irritant insulation alternatives.
There are also a variety of polystyrene boards which are examples of rigid bulk
insulation.
The facts are that bulk insulation
originated about 60 years ago for use in northern hemisphere climates (USA and
Europe) where extensive cold periods cause clearly more energy to be used for
internal heating rather than cooling of buildings.
Refer
“History of Heat Testing USA” - http://concertinafoilbatts.com/NIST.pdf
Bulk insulations are officially tested for
“Material R-value” thermal resistance, typically in Heat Flow Meters, at “Steady
State” for conducted heat between two
temperature plates fixed at 33 and 13degC, where the mean (or average) is
23degC (i.e. 33+13=46/2=23) and when mean temperature increases, resistance
falls. All bulk insulations regardless of thickness are tested at a maximum
33deg and labeled as having one “Material R-value” alone, regardless of
climatic application.
Clearly a dubious test for high summer
temperatures which exist in many regions of Australia.
Application
Understanding what the best insulation for
different Australian climates can be very difficult. The public are mostly
indoctrinated that bulk is better,
and thicker is better still. It is
common to find fibreglass company advertising mentioning only batts and vague
detail (or none at all) about their range of foil products. The consumer is not
informed about how foil insulations work and are left ignorant or
confused. Why? Because the fibreglass
manufacturers have more capital investment in manufacturing fibreglass than
foil – and more profit can be generated from fibre-glass than foil.
The selection of the right material or
combination of materials will depend on location and climate.
In hot climates, reflective foil laminates
are clearly the correct choice as bulk insulations are not radiant heat
barriers but rather radiant heat absorbers, which slow down the transfer of heat (relatively low level at 33degC), store
it, and then slowly release the heat when cooler periods arrive. And bulk insulation in ceilings causes yet other
problems – it traps summer heat within rooms from escaping, as revealed in a
1981 federally funded insulation research project undertaken across Queensland.
Refer http://www.concertinafoilbatts.com/compar.htm
High temperature frequently causes
refrigerative cooling (and ductwork insulation) to be under severe heat strain,
operate longer and consume high levels of electricity, to the point where total power demand exceeds supply and
blackouts occur. Refer http://www.concertinafoilbatts.com/belic/css/belic.htm
http://www.concertinafoilbatts.com/press.htm
When demand is high, peak pricing occurs
adding greatly to annual power bills. And greater energy use contributes to
ever increasing levels of national greenhouse gas emissions, which Australia is
committed to reduce.
The greatest and longest daytime radiant
heat loads occur on roofs. Sloping or cathedral roofs with narrow cavities are
a particular problem to correctly insulate. When roofing foil insulation is
installed it needs a minimum 50mm downward airspace to work at near maximum
efficiency and any type of bulk insulation must not fill the cavity and touch
the foil, otherwise radiant heat can penetrate the fibres, exceed the 33degC
test conditions and cause a substantial drop in summer R-value.
NB: 40% reduction in R-value - ‘Insulation Guide 2001’ http://concertinafoilbatts.com/insul2.pdf
CONCERTINA FOIL BATTS stapled between rafters can replace the
bulk or be in combination with it if the roof cavity depth permits. Anti-glare foil wraps on external walls are commonly
combined with
R1.5-2.0 fibre batts making direct
conduction with the inner facing aluminium surface which cannot then function
for low emissivity. The foil is rendered useless for thermal resistance against
external radiation, and is relegated secondary for its other uses such as
waterproofing timber wall frames and the fibre batts themselves - waterproof
paper would do the same job. CONCERTINA FOIL BATTS stapled in wall cavities replace the fibre batts,
allow the foil wrap to function and produce higher overall or total thermal performance.
It is in the public and national interest,
that energy efficient building design should incorporate aluminium foil
insulation extensively for ceilings, roofs, walls, floors. Unique and
innovative products such as CONCERTINA
FOIL BATTS and RENSHADE for windows, combined with natural ventilation and ceiling fans, will
significantly reduce the need for refrigerative air-conditioning, the most
expensive form of cooling and the subsequent drain on our energy requirements.
Industry Association
Wren Industries was also a founding member
of the Aluminium Foil Insulation Association Inc (AFIA), formed in 1998 to
promote the highest and best use of foil insulation in building design.
AFIA members have no conflicting cross-interest
in manufacture of bulk insulations.
Tim Renouf holds the position of Secretary
of AFIA.
AFIA is the peak aluminium foil
association in Australia represented on:
i)
Standards Australia Committee BD/58, which produced AS/NZS 4859.1(2002)
– a
Standard for the thermal performance of all insulation materials.
ii) Industry Technical Advisory Committee
(ITAC) of the Australian Building Codes Board (ABCB), which is responsible for
formulating national BCA Building Energy Efficiency Provisions(EEP).
The EEP is based on using tables of
Prescriptive Minimum “Total R-values” or House Energy Ratings(HERS) such as 5
Star FIRST RATE system, and is fundamentally based on the Insulation Standard
AS/NZ 4859.1.
AS/NZS 4859.1 permits insulation materials
to be expressed as either “Material R-values”- the basis for bulk insulation,
and “Total R-value” for all foil insulations.
4859 requires all insulation materials to
account for all anticipated environmental and in-situ factors, one of which is radiant energy. But at the same time
4859 permits bulk insulations to reveal one static “Material R-value”
(cross-referencing USA Standard test methods) for labeling purposes in either
winter or summer. Applying one R-value for a bulk insulation material to be
used anywhere in Australia will frequently cause problems.
Building design will continue with confusion
and error until a new comprehensive regime of
“Total R-values” are presented for all
insulation materials, i.e. a level playing field.
Standards Committee BD58 remains incapable
of creating a new “Total R-value” Standard due to the continuous objection from
powerful vested commercial interests who do not want a new method of thermal
resistance measurement which would include high temperature radiation effects and
who wish to promote the sales of bulk insulation over the scientific benefits
of aluminium foil.
The
principle of uniform “Total R-value” assessment is in the public and national
interest.
Wren Industries encourages public requests
to Standards Australia for a comprehensive
Total R-value Standard (or technical
reference document) for all insulation materials.
The current Insulation Standard does
not account for high temperature radiation effects.
Further information is available through:
Wren
www.concertinafoilbatts.com AFIA www.afia.com.au
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