A.Alex Wilson responds:With plywood
or foam sheathing on the exterior and a properly installed
vapor barrier on the interior (all seams taped or caulked), an
outside air barrier is not strictly required and will probably
not be cost-effective. However, if the vapor barrier is
typically installed — with unsealed seams and full of
holes — an exterior air barrier is a good idea.
The research on this issue is scanty. Manufacturers have
commissioned studies comparing different brands of air barriers
and comparing taped to untaped installations. But no objective,
third-party tests evaluate air barriers when the interior vapor
barrier is properly installed.
One series of tests that sheds some light on this question
was conducted in September 1987, by Architectural Testing Inc.,
in York, Pa., under the supervision of the NAHB Research
Center, for Dupont. Some of the tests were conducted on walls
with taped drywall on the interior, kraft-faced fiberglass, and
polyethylene taped over outlets and windows —
approximating a tight interior vapor barrier. Under those
conditions, properly installed Tyvek (taped at the windows and
at the top and bottom of the walls) reduced air leakage by 36%
under the equivalent of a 14-mph wind. How this relates to
energy savings in a real home, however, is unclear.
So should you use an air barrier? I recommend one in almost
all situations as an insurance policy. If the vapor barrier is
poorly installed or if it breaks down, the air barrier will be
there to keep infiltration down. At an average cost of about
12¢ per square foot, it is just slightly more expensive
than conventional building paper. An air barrier will also keep
the shell much tighter until the windows are in, which can make
a big difference in cold-weather construction.
If installing an air barrier, spend the extra few hours
necessary to tape the seams and seal around windows. With clad
windows, tape the flanges to the air barrier. With wood
windows, caulk the exterior casing to the air barrier, or apply
a bead of caulk before setting the window in place. Finally,
apply a bead of foam sealant between the jamb and framing to
provide a second, more dependable seal.
Alex Wilson is the editor and
publisher of Environmental Building
News, a bimonthly newsletter on
environmentally sustainable design and
construction.