Blog Post

EcoSeal: A New System for Air Sealing Homes

Knauf Insulation's EcoSeal can provide significant air-sealing prior to installing cavity-fill insulation

Installing Knauf EcoSeal at our farmhouse. Click to enlarge.Photo Credit: Alex Wilson

Getting back to our Dummerston, Vermont farmhouse this week, I’m reporting on our use of a relatively new product for air-sealing homes: EcoSeal from Knauf Insulation.

First some context: In the building science world, there is growing interest in achieving a robust air barrier at the sheathing layer of a house, with layers inside of that able to dry toward the interior and layers on the outside able to dry to the exterior. To make that work, the sheathing layer has to be tightly air-sealed.

In our house, we used Zip sheathing from Huber Engineered Wood as the sheathing layer with the joints taped. This is an oriented strandboard (OSB) sheathing that has a coating to improve weather resistance and reduce permeability—so it makes a great air barrier. The version of Zip used for wall sheathing is green and the version used for roof sheathing is a reddish color. Huber also makes a high-performance tape that’s used for sealing joints and edges of the Zip sheathing.

In working with an older house, like ours, there are inevitably some irregularities that make air sealing with the sheathing more difficult. With our house (originally built in the early 1800s), for example, there are beams at the top of the eave walls that extend four inches out from the wall plane (oddly), and we had to box those in with the sheathing. There may also be some air leakage at the joints, despite the taping.

EcoSeal comes in a 5-gallon bucket, and the pump unit has a 200-foot hose.Photo Credit: Alex Wilson

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So to achieve an airtight sheathing layer, it helps to add some air sealing from the interior. Some builders use a “flash and batt” system for this: a thin layer of spray polyurethane foam (SPF) is applied against the sheathing from the interior (up to about an inch thick) and the cavity is then insulated with batt or other cavity-fill insulation. The SPF is great at air sealing but pretty expensive as an insulation material, so flash-and-batt is a reasonable solution.

Another solution is to use one of two new products for sealing just the joints and cracks at the sheathing layer. Owens Corning makes the EnergyComplete system, and Knauf makes EcoSeal (warning: this link opens with an installation video that has a somewhat jarring soundtrack).

An acrylic air-sealing system

EcoSeal is an acrylic product that is applied using high-pressure paint-spraying equipment. The installer arrived with two five gallons buckets of the bright-blue acrylic material that was the consistency of very thick paint. The system comes with a long, 200-foot hose, so the pump and bucket can stay in one place in the house while the work proceeds. The pump is very quiet.

The installer started on the first floor and worked methodically around the room sealing all the joints and cracks, them moved upstairs. We had arranged for someone from Efficiency Vermont to come down with a blower door (a device used for testing the air tightness of a house) and run the blower door during the EcoSeal installation.

Jennifer Severidt from Efficiency Vermont adjusting her blower door.Photo Credit: Alex Wilson

Here’s how a blower door works: a fan in the blower door depressurizes the house enough to maintain a 50 pascal difference is air pressure between the inside and outside—as measured by an integral manometer (air pressure gauge). Instrumentation in the unit calculates the cubic feet per minute (cfm) of air flow going through the fan to maintain the 50 pascal pressure differential.

The blower door, as we used it, did two things: first, it exaggerated the air leakage so the installer could feel cracks that needed sealing; and second, it allowed us to measure the success of the air sealing.

EcoSeal doesn’t expand as it is installed (as do foam sealants), and it takes up to day to fully cure. The cure time depends significantly on the environmental conditions—temperature, humidity, etc. Our house was fairly cool during installation, so the cure time was significant. The material can span up to about a 3/8-inch gap, according to Knauf, and it remains flexible.

Jennifer's blower door showing 651 cfm at 49.3 pascals. The pressure changes with outdoor conditions.Photo Credit: Alex Wilson

If EcoSeal gets on surfaces where it doesn’t belong (as occurred once during our installation when some got on one of our windows), it easily washes off with water. We were in the house throughout the installation and could barely smell it, so I’m confident that it has low VOC (volatile organic compound) emissions.

Significant measured improvement

When we started EcoSeal installation, the blower door was showing 950 cfm of air leakage at 50 pascals (cfm50). During the course of about four hours of work on the air sealing, that air leakage rate dropped to 640 cfm50. That’s an improvement of a third—not bad.

Given the volume of the house, 640 cfm50 is equivalent to 1.6 air changes per hour at 50 pascals (ACH50), which is very respectable for a new house, let alone a renovation.

Sealing on the second-floor gable wall.Photo Credit: Alex Wilson

More about EcoSeal

Knauf Insulation introduced EcoSeal in January 2011. It’s still a very new product, with only 100 installers nationwide, according to Brett Welch of the company. He estimates that about 2,500 homes have so far been sealed with the system.

In houses where there hasn’t been as much attention paid to air tightening (no taped sheathing), a more typical tightness achieved is 2.5 – 3.0 ACH50. Welch said EcoSeal has also been used in a few Passive House projects, where air tightness of 0.6 ACH50 must be achieved.

EcoSeal costs $200 - $250 per five-gallon bucket, according to Welch, with 2-3 buckets typically required for a house. He estimates 6-10 hours of labor for an installation, bringing the total installed cost into the $1,000 to $1,500 range. It can be installed at temperatures ranging from 20°F to 115°F, though at the low temperature range, the material in the bucket must be fluid and the cure time is longer. It can be stored at 35°F to 120°F.

A Palo Alto Passive House under construction that used Owens Corning's Energy Complete system.Photo Credit: Alex Wilson

Similar system from Owens Corning

While Knauf’s EcoSeal is a one-part system, Owens Corning’s EnergyComplete is a two-part system that is foamed in place. It expands slightly as it is installed and sets up very quickly—in less that a half-hour. I don’t have personal experience with EnergyComplete, but visited a Passive House under construction in Palo Alto in late-2010 that had just been sealed with the system, and was impressed with it.

Alex is founder of BuildingGreen, Inc. and executive editor of Environmental Building News. In 2012 he founded the Resilient Design Institute. To keep up with Alex’s latest articles and musings, you can sign up for his Twitter feed.

Published April 16, 2013

(2013, April 16). EcoSeal: A New System for Air Sealing Homes. Retrieved from https://www.buildinggreen.com/blog/ecoseal-new-system-air-sealing-homes

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Comments

May 7, 2018 - 1:10 am

I assume this product used with Zip Sheathing is intended for cooling dominated climates?

May 22, 2013 - 2:56 pm

Charles,

In our case I think the air barrier (Huber's Zip sheathing) is vapor-impermeable to a significant extent. It is a coated sheathing product that I see widely used in highly energy-efficient building enclosures, such as Passive House projects. I have wanted to get my colleague to to do some WUFU runs on the project.

May 22, 2013 - 12:51 pm

The article suggests that from the air barrier location, the wall dries to interior within, and to exterior without. That's only the case when the air barrier is vapor-impermeable. We find, using thermal + moisture modeling, that most assemblies in mixed heating/cooling climates work better (stay drier) when the construction is more highly vapor permeable. Exceptions are when vapor drive is very high, such as enforced interior winter humidity (museums and other archival spaces), natatoria, etc.