Steve C
Platinum Member
The sweating, or moisture is condensation. It's caused from the moisture in the air, and the temperature of the metal. All air hold water. It's measured as humidty. When the humidity level is 100%, you have moisture. Below that level, it's still part of the air. Air can only hold so much water. The warmer the air, the more water it can hold.
So at a given temp, the humidity level will be at one point. When the temp increases, the abilit for the air to hold water increase too, and the humidity level decreases. When the temps decrease, the ability for the air to hold water also decreases. When this happens, any areas of that air that decrease to the point of 100% humidity will result in moisture appearing.
Metal is very prone to this because it gets colder faster then most other materials. It's only the air right next to the metal that is affected, but because the metal is cooler then that area of air, the humidity level increases to more then the air can hold. The result is condensation.
A foam barrier works great to stop this, but so does other materaial. Bubble wrap and wood work too. Creating an air pocket behind the foam or wood will actually allow that space to be warmer then the outside air, and you'll have less condensation.
Eddie
Moisture in the air is measured as relative humidity and is calculated as grains of moisture per pound of dry air. This lets you calculate the total weight and therefore volume of water vapor that is available for extraction/ condensation out of any given volume of air. If the area is sealed, once this moisture is extracted condensation can no longer happen and things will stop sweating so a dehumidifier will work well in a closed area that has a good vapor barier envelope.
The problem comes from the fact that most building materials are permeable to water vapor, so even if you dry out the area and it is sealed, it becomes an area of low vapor pressure and the areas of higher vapor pressure will cause a migration of water vapor to the area of low vapor pressure exactly the same way that heat migrates to an area of less heat.
Water vapor will flow right through concrete floors and block walls.
Many people don't bother to put down a vapor barrier.
If you have a dehumidifier that can condese water faster than it can flow through the structure into the area the problem will go away. The other option is to prevent the flow through the walls and floor with a vapor barrier.
Most paint is not a vapor barrier but can buy some that is.
You can use a psycometric chart to determine the properties of the air if you know the relative humidity and the temperature. You can calculate the relative humidity with the use of a dry bulb thermometer and a wet bulb thermometer and a psycometric chart. It will tell you the dew point of the air.
The dew point temperature goes up as the relative humidity goes up. Once it reaches 100% it will start to condense, it is unable to hold any more water vapor, you have fog.
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