Regardless of whether there is a screed under the floor or just filling with expanded clay, or maybe there will be damp earth under the floor, so that the wooden floorboards are warm, the space under the upper deck will need to be insulated.
For this, the well-known and most common method is used: floor insulation by logs. About what lags are and what kind of insulation is best suited for thermal insulation of wooden floors, as well as what schemes it is best to implement and will be discussed in our material.
Types of insulation for the floor
Logs are wide bars mounted on an edge and running from wall to wall parallel to each other. Plastic or metal beams can also play their role. Further, the boards of the finishing floor are attached to them, so it is very important to stack them correctly so that over time the floor does not creak or deform.
The selected version of the insulation fits between, and sometimes under the lags. Let's try to figure out which material for thermal insulation of the floor is better to give preference to, and which ones are even better to refuse.
Not necessarily lags should be just boards. Often this is an ordinary beam, adjusted in level in one plane. The main thing is to fix them well and align them so that subsequent laying of the floor does not bring problems to the homeowner
We will consider the most popular varieties of materials for insulation, which are characterized by rather high rates of heat saving.
These included:
- sawdust or sawdust mixture;
- expanded clay;
- glass wool;
- mineral wool;
- ecowool;
- penoplex;
- polystyrene foam.
All of the listed heaters are quite airy, which means they will miss the cold with great reluctance. In addition, a quality-laid insulation layer is able to prevent the appearance of high humidity in the house, which is also important.
Option number 1 - budget sawdust
This material has the most unstable performance. Often, it is saturated with moisture, which at times worsens its heat-shielding performance.
In this case, it is better for the owner to take care of the bottom layer of waterproofing, since wet wood begins to churn, rot, and this can cause not only damage to the coating, but also a number of serious diseases.
Often, as a relatively budget option, pellets or sawdust granules similar to pellets are used to warm the floor. In them, sawdust is pressed and held by means of an adhesive base.
Such a heater will have slightly better thermal conductivity, but experts do not recommend insulating the floors of your home with such material. Its moisture resistance leaves much to be desired.
Of course, if it is planned to insulate the floor at the cottage or in the outbuilding, then you can use sawdust, but they are completely unsuitable as floor insulation in the house. It is better not to save, but to purchase a more expensive and high-quality insulation.
According to experts, sawdust is one of the most undesirable materials for floor insulation. But the budget of the material, often takes its toll. Experienced builders recommend the use of sawdust only in the case of floor insulation of household buildings
Option number 2 - eco-friendly expanded clay
This material is quite popular, because of its affordable cost, insulation. Therefore, it is not surprising that he has the most mediocre indicators.
At a relative and relatively low thermal conductivity for thermal insulation materials (within 0.1 W / m * K), it also has a number of unconditional advantages:
- it is the most environmentally friendly material of all presented in our list of heaters;
- it is loose, and therefore easy to install;
- completely fireproof, since it does not burn at all;
- does not decay;
- its granules have a high degree of strength.
But residents of the northern regions, in which expanded clay is covered with expanded clay under the floorboards, often complain about the fact that it draws cold from below. And this is no wonder. Even with the fact that the expanded clay material is porous, its foundation itself is solid, and therefore it is just as inclined to absorb the cold as to give it away.
And, of course, the indices of its thermal conductivity vary greatly in accordance with the size of the granules. The larger the granules, the higher the level of thermal protection will be, and vice versa.
After warming the floor with expanded clay, it will not be the warmest floor. But owners often use this material, especially in the southern latitudes or when erecting floors for utility rooms
Option number 3 - affordable glass wool
Despite the fact that glass wool is a subspecies of mineral wool, it is considered unsafe material, so we will consider it separately. Her villi are nothing more than real glass fibers. They can not only cause irritation on the skin and damage the eyes, but also cause serious lung problems. That is why it is universally preferred to replace it with mineral and ecowool.
The main advantages of glass wool are:
- chemical inertness, the material is dangerous only in its physical characteristics;
- high vapor permeability;
- ease of installation. This material is perfectly cut with scissors.
But some still have not refused to use it. After all, the thermal conductivity parameters of it are more than two times lower than that of the same expanded clay (within 0.04 W / m * K).
And if a protective layer of vapor barrier and the threat of fiberglass fiber damage are laid on top of it, thereby being reduced to 100% to zero, why not use this material?
Glass wool is not the safest material. Some people have a severe allergic reaction to it. Therefore, at present they prefer to replace it with other types of cotton wool.
Option number 4 - popular mineral wool
This is a more expensive analogue of glass wool. It has all its advantages, but at the same time, it is completely safe for health.
This is due to the fact that the mineral wool fibers are smaller, softer and not made from glass solidified fibers, but from natural natural minerals - carbonates, that is, rock formations that are mixed with various additives.
Such cotton wool is even more convenient, since it can even be taken with bare hands without fear. For convenience, it is available both in rolls and sliced to specific sizes.
On sale you can find mineral wool of several varieties - stone, basalt and slag. But it is not 100% composed of rocks. A certain part of it is occupied by products of the metallurgical industry
Option number 5 - quality ecowool
Ecowool is an even more expensive analogue of glass and mineral wool. Its advantages are mainly 100%, as in the case of expanded clay and sawdust, environmental friendliness. It, like the previous materials, has a low degree of thermal conductivity, but, at the same time, remains the only material from all that are not affected by rodents.
Its important advantage is that if mice and rats arrange not only moves, but also whole nests in glass wool, mineral wool, and foam, then they do not touch ecowool, because it causes a strong allergic reaction and dehydration in them.
Oddly enough, more than 80% of ecowool consists of recycled waste paper, that is, it is a product of recycled cellulose. In addition, it contains harmless antiseptics - boric acid and borax based refractory impregnation
Option number 6 - high strength foam
Penoplex is a foamed polystyrene foam. In other words, it is a frozen foam mass of molten polyethylene granules. Something remotely it resembles foam rubber, only hardened and hardened.
In terms of its thermal conductivity, it is ahead of all the above varieties of wat. The coefficient of thermal conductivity of a penoplex varies within 0.03 W / m * K.
He has:
- low rates of water absorption;
- high strength indicators;
- low density.
The only drawback of it, and even then not in all cases, is poor vapor permeability. But in case the room is equipped with good ventilation, this is not critical.
More information about foam insulation can be found here.
Penoplex in its energy-saving qualities is in no way inferior to polystyrene. But, while working with it is much easier. And therefore it costs significantly more
Option number 7 - popular polystyrene foam
Its performance is not worse than that of penoplex. It differs from the previous material only in that it is not a foamed layer of hardened plastic, but a layer made of compressed granules of air polystyrene.
If you look closely, it will become clear that the material consists of small balls. In a piece of regular polystyrene, they will be larger - up to 5 mm in diameter, in extruded polystyrene - on the contrary, less - up to 0.1 mm.
But this does not affect the merits of the material, which are one-on-one similar to those described for penoplex. The only difference is that the foam will be more difficult to cut, and after the laying work is done, between the lags there always remain mountains of garbage that are electrified, which makes it not so easy to remove.
It is also worth noting that the expanded polystyrene will have to be cut strictly in size between the logs with a small overlap of 1-2 mm, otherwise the gaps remaining between the board and the insulation will negate all thermal insulation. That is why cotton insulation is most often used for floor insulation.
The balls that make up the polystyrene foam slabs are literally filled with air. It is enough to take a plate of insulation in your hands to feel it - this material is able to warm like a dry and airy downy layer
Popular floor insulation schemes
In practice, most often, two schemes are used to warm the floor of the basement / lower floor. The first is the most enhanced when the insulation is present both under the lags and between them. Such thermal insulation, as described in the first case, is used only in the northern latitudes, where the ground freezes in winter quite noticeably.
But most often, on the ground floor of the building, the logs are mounted on top of the screed, and in some cases on top of well-planned soil.
Consider both examples suitable for the basement, and then talk about floor insulation of the upper rooms.
The scheme provides options for floor insulation for lower floors. The layer of DSP can be simplified, which is preferred by most owners
Reinforced thermal insulation
According to this scheme, at first, even before the installation of the lag, it is necessary to plan the soil and insulate it with a lower layer.
As a heater for the first layer, builders can choose:
- expanded clay concrete;
- expanded claydite layer;
- extruded polystyrene foam;
- harder and denser variety of foam.
On top of it, logs are already mounted, after which the space between them is also carefully filled with insulation. This time, the same penoplex or one of the varieties of wat can act as it.
In this case, people often resort to double waterproofing - one is laid between the upper and lower layers of insulation, the other - on top of the top, on which counterrails for ventilation and, directly, floorboards will be mounted.
In this embodiment, foam was chosen as the lower layer of insulation. The material of the top layer does not have to be identical to the bottom
The usual scheme of insulation
Everything is clear here. Logs are mounted directly on top of the planned ground surface or, in the case of screed, on it.
Next, a layer of insulation is laid on them. On the insulation there is a vapor barrier layer, the role of which, as a rule, is an ordinary thick polyethylene film. Then, thin counter-rails are beaten on top of the lags (some of them can be neglected), after which a fine floor covering is laid.
If you want to insulate the floor on the upper floors, then you have to act a little differently. Here, the vapor barrier layer is first laid on the flooring material - the same film, then only the logs are mounted.
Often in this case, builders on top of the ground lay a kind of rough floor - the basis for insulation. Here is how it will look on the diagram
When insulating the floor with mineral wool or ecowool, the lower layer of vapor barrier must be present. This is especially true for the second and all subsequent floors.
The space between the lag is covered with a heater, after which everything is covered again with a film. Counterracks are screwed onto the logs with a screwdriver, on which the final floor spreads.
We also recommend reading an article where we described in detail how to put into practice the insulation of a wooden floor.
It can be seen from all that the process of floor insulation by logs is not so costly and time-consuming as it seems at first glance. The choice of insulation is always at the discretion of the owner. In addition to sawdust and expanded clay, any of the listed materials will be optimal. Except, perhaps, polystyrene, with the cutting of which you will have to very much tinker.
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