Using spray foam in an attic is a simple way to improve the energy efficiency of your home. It is particularly useful in for energy efficiency upgrades to existing homes. Most existing homes have an array of unsealed areas such as drop ceilings and bulkheads, plumbing and electrical service penetrations, leaky ducts and duct penetrations. Adding conventional air permeable insulation alone won’t solve the problem. Insulating and air sealing with spray foam can.
Spray foam can be applied to floor of the attic to air seal or insulate or the underside of the roof deck to encapsulate the space. If there is no ductwork in the attic and there are no plans to turn the attic into occupied space, you may consider adding insulation to the floor of the attic. However, if ductwork and equipment in the attic make it difficult to access areas of the attic floor, or if there are plans to convert the attic into living space, it could make more sense to insulate at the roof deck. Applying spray foam to the underside of the roof deck can create an “unvented attic.”
All homeowners have the opportunity to benefit from energy savings of unvented attics. Unvented attics work great in both new and existing construction. In a new building, the unvented attics can be installed during the construction process with spray foam applied directly on the underside of the attic walls and roof, leading to continuous coverage and maximum air sealing. In an existing building, the spray application for spray foam allows the product to be applied around any existing obstacles and into the hard-to-reach spaces of an unvented attics and unvented crawlspaces.
Unvented attics bring duct work into conditioned space. This means that conditioned air that leaks from the ducts will not be wasted. It will remain in conditioned space and can passively condition the air in the occupied space. Duct air leakage commonly exceeds 20 percent of conditioned air flow, which results in a significant energy loss when ducts are in unconditioned space such as vented attics.
Unvented attics also reduce the heat loss/gain through mechanical equipment and as a result of limiting the loss of conditioned air through the attic (stack effect). Stack effect is the natural movement of cold air into the bottom of a structure, which is pulled by warm air exiting the top of the structure. In summer the process reverses and warm air comes in through the attic and exits through the lower floors; this tends to make upstairs rooms less comfortable.