its pointless trying to work out the u value of 1 element of construction. A u value of an element of construction such as a wall, floor roof etc... is the inverse of teh sum of all teh resistances.
materials have 'thermal conductivity' (TC) values.
The thermal resistance of the material is the thickness divided by the TC value.
The thermal resistance (R) of a construction is the sum of all the thermal resistances.
The U value is the inverse of this total resistance.
you will find many thermal conductivities here, on page 36:
http://www.environ.ie/en/Publications/DevelopmentandHousing/BuildingStandards/FileDownLoad,19069,en.pdf (http://www.environ.ie/en/Publication...d,19069,en.pdf)
Happy to let others crunch the numbers where appropriate.
Some of the drawings on the fasttrackcad site seem quite old.
Slight concern arising in terms of someone deciding to use them.
...even so, you can't work out the sum total, without knowing the properties of the individual parts anyway, so he still needs to know it.
I agree, the Kingspan site is a minefield..........drives me mad. I notice this is like a lot of the larger corporate ones - the bigger the corporation, the more complex the site. DuPont, DOW, etc all similar.......unfortunately....
he needs to know the thermal conductivity of the material he is choosing... not the u value....
i should clarify....
knowing the u value of a piece of material has no constructive use.
for example, using the OPs query.... "whats the u value of kingspan K17 board?"
kingspan K17 kooltherm board is a composite board made up of phenolic foam and gypsum plasterboard.
The phenolic foam has a thermal conductivity of 0.022 W/mK.
The plasterboard has a TC value of 0.18.
If he/she uses a 52.5mm board it would have u value of 0.55 W/m2K
If he/she uses a 42.5mm board it would have u value of 0.73 W/m2K
If he/she uses a 62.5mm board it would have u value of 0.45 W/m2K
etc etc...
therefore the u value depends on the thickness and thermal conductivity.
If the op is looking to select between different products he / she should compare the thermal conductivity values as a measurement of which is "better" than others.
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If the op is looking to select between different products he / she should compare the thermal conductivity values as a measurement of which is "better" than others.