The Last Word on Foil.

Lately I have been thinking about the application of the foil I use in my saunas as a radiant vapor barrier. Perhaps this is because it almost Christmas and I was thinking of how we decorated the tree each year. The final touch would be to drape foil tinsel over everything; our mother would have to constantly damp down our enthusiasm by reminding us to place it carefully on each branch, not to throw it. 

NOT sauna foil.
This suspicious “sauna” foil is Aluminum-coated Plastic—upper working temperature of only 55-120° C.

There are tricks to using the foil but the first and most important step is to buy the right stuff. Like the tinsel we put on the tree, the foil may actually be aluminum-coated plastic— which you don’t want to use. That plastic is likely polyethylene which, if you look it up on the material specification sheet that every product has, it has an upper working temperature of 55-120° C, meaning it will likely melt at typical sauna temps. Sauna Foil, available from any of the familiar sauna suppliers, is aluminum foil on a kraft paper backing. I used to find it with fiberglass reinforcing thread, which is helpful because the stuff tears easily. Also helpful is 4 ft. rolls, rather than 3 ft so you can do a wall in 2 passes, but I have trouble finding this too. I recently tried a new supplier selling 4 ft rolls of  “sauna” foil, but upon opening it had a suspicious plastic look to it. That night I put it in the sauna and within seconds it began to distort and curl up like the polyethylene I suspected it was made of. (See illustration above)

The second thing is to design the wall correctly. I read and see a lot of misinformation that touts using no air gap with foil.  The air gap is essential.  The foil works by reflecting radiant heat. All “black bodies” give off and absorb radiant heat that travels in a straight line from one hotter object to another cooler one, the hotter the body, the more heat it emits. The sauna rocks radiate a “soft” heat to you, the walls, and the benches, and that is why you want the sauna to be laid out so that everyone has a view of the rocks. The fire, if seen through a clear glass door, also radiates heat— but at a higher intensity. Too high for a comfortable sauna (but great for ambiance.) When that heat hits foil, it is reflected back into the room or the backside of the cedar—if there is an air gap of at least 1/2″. If it touches the backside of the cedar the foil— also a perfect conductor—pulls the heat away from the cedar and transfers to the wall space behind.

Proper sauna insulating with an air gap on backside of cedar.
Air Gap. A Sauna Building Best Practice.

I’ve understood this for along time. The first semester of college I took a class: Solar Design and the Energy Efficient Home. We learned all about insulation, heat transfer and basic building skills. The first day of lab, where we were building a timber frame house, I was handed a Makita 12″ circular saw. My building career started right then and there.

With the web of misinformation out there I had to think of a way to illustrate this basic principle of thermodynamics that I learned my freshman year. So, one slow day in the shop I rigged up an experiment and photographed it. (see illustration below) I set up a section of cedar wall about 18″ from my infrared shop heater and fastened 2 pieces of foil to the back, one with a 3/4″ air gap, and one with no gap. After an hour the cedar was 250°F on the front—like it is often is in my sauna. The back of the cedar was 121° F, which is impressive by itself. The back of the foil with no gap was 115°F, meaning it was acting as a perfect conductor, and the back of the foil with an air gap was 71°F: room temp. The air gap was clearly making a difference, 45° in this case. 

Sauna thermodynamics by sauna builder Rob Licht Custom Saunas
The thermodynamic experiment begins.

The foil is a perfect vapor barrier rated at zero perms— meaning no vapor moves through it. But unless you layer it properly, with insulation behind it, the moisture will condense on it, or the first cold surface it hits. Even in a perfect build, there might be cold spots in the insulation (typically about the size of a mouse hole), so there likely be some condensation, but not a problem if there is air movement. The air gap behind the cedar allows air to circulate around the cedar, removing any moisture and ensuring that the wood heats and dries evenly and remains stable. Heating one side of a board and wetting or cooling the other is how you make curved boat staves.

There are other tricks to using the foil- like unrolling it and re-rolling it foil-in, or using temporary magnets when working a commercial job with metal studs, but the key is to use care. Use plenty of hi-temp foil tape and patch tears as you go and work with a partner if possible.

I suppose you could build a sauna by putting a heater in a refrigerator box- but that would last about a day and be incredibly wasteful. Cedar touching foil won’t ruin your sauna and neither will plastic melting in the walls where you don’t see it. But if you are going to take the time and bear the expense of building a sauna, you might as well do it right and so it will last generations. I guess my mother was right: applying foil carefully and not just throwing it up is the way to work.

Sauna Insulation, Revisited

A lot of building science is pretty theoretical because, no matter how much research you do, at the end of the job most of the work is hidden in the walls. Unless you come back to do renovations, or worse, get a dreaded “call back” for something gone seriously wrong, you rarely get the opportunity to see how your work performs. I am not talking about cosmetic details like nail holes that don’t get filled or rough edges that didn’t get sanded, but about how well materials hold up to the heat or how well you have managed moisture movement through the walls, either as precipitation working its way in, or the more mysterious way that water vapor works its way out. (or inwards in some climates). This moisture is driven by vapor pressure, which can drive water molecules through most any material given the right humidity and heat differentials— something a sauna has a lot of. I learned about vapor pressure when I realized that my hollow steel yard sculptures were inexplicably filling up with water. My welds are very solid and water-tight but somehow moisture was penetrating the steel, condensing and not getting out. Cutting holes in the bottoms to let trapped water out solved that problem. There’s a bit of molecular science involved here, but suffice it say that vapor pressure is very strong- strong enough that when I throw water on the hot rocks my sauna door pops open as if the löyly has scared a ghost out of hiding. (Read previous post about Insulating Saunas)

Thinking about all of this has left me wondering what is happening in my sauna walls; am I doing a good job? is the insulation holding up? is water getting trapped?

Yesterday I had to do some retrofitting on the first mobile sauna I built in 2013. I exchanged the Scandia gas heater for a wood burner and got to peer into the dark interior of the walls. This is a sauna that has seen heavy and very hot (200°+) usage.
The walls were built with cedar inside and out with only a 1″ layer of foil faced polyioscyanurate foam board in between the studs.

Here is what I found:

There was no damage from trapped moisture and the foam board looked as good as new; the foil facing still shiny!
There was some high-temp fiber fax insulation used around the gas heater; a rodent had gotten into this (despite my filling gaps around the gas line with steel wool) and made a stinky little nest.

So this confirmed my use of the polyisocyanurate board, which has a service temperature of 250°F and my disdain of fiberglass type materials (because rodents love it).

On my desk I have a piece of EXP (expanded polysytrene) foam I pulled out of a failed sauna I was asked to repair. It looks like one of my steel sculptures from my Landform series – a flowing, green landscape (of melted plastic). Its service temp is listed as 150° F. All materials have material data sheets, usually available on the manufacturers web pages. I consult these whenever I am unsure about materials, especially given that the extremes of the sauna are like the extremes NASA engineers have to deal with.
Clearly there is a correlation between science and reality, even if it is happening unseen inside the walls of your sauna. So when choosing materials, listen to the science, learn from observation and don’t just buy the cheapest materials or use only the easiest approach. Consult with the experts. Sometimes there is more to it than meets the eye.

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