Dow Structural Insulated Sheathing: A Solution for Coastal
Walls?
There's a growing buzz among green and energy-efficient
builders about Styrofoam SIS, a new "structural insulated
sheathing" product from Dow Corporation that offers builders
effective wall bracing, significant R-value, and a functioning
drainage plane in a single application of material.
Dow engineer Doug DeWildt, who led the company's development
of the material, calls SIS a "composite member." Says DeWildt,
"It's a structural member and a high-performance insulation
material. The insulation is a polyisocyanate, one of your
highest rigid-foam insulation chemistries. And then combine
that with a laminated fibrous board sheathing that's pressure
laminated, to get a real dense and yet nailable, mechanically
fastenable product."
The one-step application gives SIS its practical edge,
DeWildt says, compared with a multi-step process using a
structural panel (plywood or OSB) topped with a layer of foam
insulation. "There's an over-sheathing market, but it's not
very big," he says. "It never has caught on with builders or
panelizers to put on one layer of sheathing and then go back
and put on the next. This allows us to avoid that additional
step."
DOW tweaked the fiberboard manufacturing process to tune the
panels' board facing for practical handling and performance,
says DeWildt: "You can find some other products out there that
are maybe more highly densified, but you can't get a nail
through them real well, and they won't have the dimensional
stability."
DeWildt also says that SIS turned out to offer an unexpected
energy benefit, beyond just its continuous insulating R-value.
"It's a rigid board, but it's not quite as rigid as OSB, and so
it seals better to the stud. It has a little more gasketing
effect. And so we're getting about a third the air infiltration
as an OSB house — which is huge, because heat loss is
due to both the conductive losses and the convection."
SIS has been thoroughly tested as a code-compliant
equivalent to other wall-bracing methods that are permitted
under the International Residential Code, says DeWildt. That
testing was done in accordance with the ICC Evaluation
Services' acceptance criteria AC 269; Dow's code report,
ESR-2436, is posted at the company's website.
According to the evaluation report, SIS has to be applied in
accordance with the IRC wall-bracing method 4, "structural
fiberboard sheathing." Depending on the number of stories, and
which story the wall is part of, sheathing may need to cover
anywhere from 16% of the wall area (for a one-story building or
the top story of a taller building) to as much as 60% of the
wall area (for the lowest story of a 3-story building).
Typically, panels must be nailed at 3 inches on-center around
the perimeter of the panel; nailing in the field may be either
6 inches on-center or 3 inches on-center, depending on the
design wind speed, the stud spacing, and the size and shape of
the building.
But all that is for the prescriptive IRC, which only applies
to relatively moderate design wind speeds (up to 100 mph, in
the 2006 code). What if you're building to a wind speed of
120-mph, 130-mph, or even higher, where an engineered design is
required? DeWildt says the SIS product still has applications
in very-high-wind construction, but he says the details will
depend on the building.
"The product is used in engineered designs," DeWildt says,
"and we will supply design professionals with allowable shear
values comparable to other structural panels. It's been tested
in a number of ways, with different attachments."
Does that mean that you can put SIS sheathing on a house in
South Dade County in Florida, and handle the wind loads? "Yes,
if it meets your engineering criteria — if you don't
have a ton of windows or whatnot," says DeWildt. "We followed
the same testing protocols that were done with other panels,
and we've got quite a library of testing conditions, so that
people can use it the way they like and try to get the design
loads that they need."
With a requried on-center nail or staple spacing of 3
inches, even in the lower wind speeds allowed by the IRC,
there's not much room to increase the number of fasteners. "The
variables are the house design, the wind loads, and then the
allowable shear values of your product," says DeWildt. "The
biggest thing is window area — how many windows there
are. But people are engineering with it every week —
any time they get outside the prescriptive values, they turn to
us for the engineered values, and most of the time I believe
they can make it work."
For general installation guidelines, view this DOW
video.