A note on Insulators:
I want to put timber as an insulator into context.
Timber was considered an insulator for many years, because it is a poor conductor of heat.
The terms "conductor" and "insulator" in general physics may also refer to materials which respectively can and cannot conduct electricity.
These define the extremes of conductivity.
Conductors are typically non-organic homogenous materials where electrons are free to move around to carry the electrical charge.
Many metals are electrical conductors.
Insulators are typically nonhomogenous materials - mixtures of substances, bodies of living organisms or organic compounds.
Timber is the body of a tree which is composed of many small cellular structures whose walls are made from carbon compounds.
Compounds elements are complex in composition where electrons are bound more tightly to atoms and so are poor at carrying current.
The mixtures are disparate substances which are joined at the macro level so that current cannot easily be transported through the material.
Plastics, timber, concrete are all examples of electrical insulators.
Materials which are good at carrying current also are good at conducting heat [thermal conductors and insulators] and the opposite also holds true in many cases.
Air, trapped in cellular or fibrous materials to prevent large air movements is used as the basis for many so-called insulators.
Depending on how a building element is constructed this can be effective or less so.
Recent empirical studies have shown how insulation that is not tight to the inner leaf can allow thermal looping of air in the cavity to occur.
This takes heat from the space between the inner leaf and the insulation and significantly reduces its performance.
However everything is relative.
Everything except a vacuum conducts or convects heat to a greater or lesser degree.
But even a vacuum allows radiative heat, which is why you see spacecraft covered in reflective foil.
This ends your AAM University lecture Science 101.
ONQ.
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