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IDENTIFICATION of ASBESTOS in BUILDINGS Asbestos Risk Assessment INTERIORS ASBESTOS ATTIC LEAKS, CONDENSATION & ATTIC MOLD ENVIRONMENTAL HAZARDS HEAT LOSS CALCULATIONS HUMIDITY LEVEL TARGET ICE DAM PREVENTION INSULATION INSPECTIONS Insulation Materials Asbestos Identification in Buildings Asbestos Pipe Insulation Asbestos-Free Insulation Materials Balsam Wool Batt Insulation Cotton Insulating Batts Cellulose loose fill insulation Fiberglass Insulation Foam Board Insulation Foam Spray Icynene Insulation Mineral Wool/Rock Wool Insulation Paper Duct Insulation Perlite Insulation Urea Formaldehyde Foam Insulation UFFI Vermiculite Insulation Heat Loss Calculations Insulation Material Identification Guide Insulation R-Values & Properties LIST of Asbestos Containing Products Mold Growth Resistance of Foam Insulation More Information InspectAPedia TM Home & Site Map |
This page illustrates and describes mineral wool insulation materials also called rock wool and slag wool. I've added these examples because of frequent questions about these materials. This document assists building buyers, owners or inspectors who need to identify various insulation materials in buildings by simple visual inspection. We provide photographs and descriptive text of various types of mineral wool insulation and describe its properties, how it is made, health and maintenance concerns, and its insulating values. © Copyright 2008 Daniel Friedman, All Rights Reserved. Information Accuracy & Bias Pledge is at below-left. Use links at the left of each page to navigate this document or to view other topics at this website. Green links show where you are in our document or website. MINERAL WOOL/"ROCK WOOL" - Mineral wool or "rock wool" or "slag wool" building insulation is not asbestosMineral wool insulation, developed in the 1850's, patented in 1875 in the U.S. and this material, also called rock wool insulation remained in popular use in the U.S. up to the 1950's, and is still in use today (2008) in some new construction, in manufactured housing, and in special applications such as the insulation of low-slope roofed cathedral ceilings and scissors-truss roofs. What is Rock Wool Insulation?Just to add to the confusion about what to call this insulation, the insulation industry calls a range of products "mineral wool" and includes under that name: fiberglass, slag wool, and rock wool. Rock wool is a naturally-occurring mineral fiber that looks like chopped white cottony material. (It may have originally been formed by wind blowing across streams of lava from erupting volcanoes.) Rockwool is currently produced in the U.S. in Indiana, North Carolina, Texas, and Washington State.
As you can see in our photo at left, mineral wool insulation is not necessarily stark white. In an attic rockwool is typically about 1 1/2 pounds per cubic foot in density. In building walls this material is installed in more dense sprays of four to five pounds of material per cubic foot. At roughly 1.2 pounds per cubic foot, rockwool or mineral wool has an R-value of R-30 (heavier than fiberglass). Rock wool as a building insulating material remains in active use in the U.S. and has been reported in application in the Southern U.S. in the mid 1980's and continuing at least into the mid 1990's. [Home Energy Magazine Online, July/August 1997] Modern rock wool is a manufactured product comprised of a mix of limestone, slag waste from steel blast furnaces, and basalt or diabase. Rockwool is about 3/4 steel slag and 25% basalt rock. Some rockwool producers use nearly pure recycled steel slag. Similar to the production of fiberglass, rock wool is manufactured by heating these materials and spinning them into fine fibers that are then often applied in a sprayed-on chopped fiber form. Airborne particle characteristics of Rock Wool Insulation
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IDENTIFICATION of ASBESTOS in BUILDINGS Asbestos Risk Assessment INTERIORS INSULATION INSPECTIONS Insulation Materials Asbestos Identification in Buildings Asbestos Pipe Insulation Asbestos-Free Insulation Materials Balsam Wool Batt Insulation Cotton Insulating Batts Cellulose loose fill insulation Fiberglass Insulation Foam Board Insulation Foam Spray Icynene Insulation Mineral Wool/Rock Wool Insulation Paper Duct Insulation Perlite Insulation Urea Formaldehyde Foam Insulation UFFI Vermiculite Insulation Heat Loss Calculations Insulation Material Identification Guide Insulation R-Values & Properties LIST of Asbestos Containing Products Mold Growth Resistance of Foam Insulation More Information InspectAPedia TM Home & Site Map Air Conditioning InspectAPedia Bookstore Electrical Environment Exteriors Heating Home Inspection Insulate Ventilate Interiors Mold Inspect/Test Plumbing Water Septic Roofing Structure Accuracy & Bias Pledge Contact Us |
Use links just below or at the left of each page to navigate this document or to view other topics at this website. Green links show where you are in our document or website. IDENTIFICATION of ASBESTOS in BUILDINGS Technical Reviewers & ReferencesParticular thanks are due to experts and also consumers who read these articles and suggest corrections, changes, and additions to the material. Content suggestions, technical corrections and content critique are invited for any of the content at our website.
More expert information on Asbestos Identification, Recognition, & Testing | |
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IDENTIFICATION of ASBESTOS in BUILDINGS Asbestos Risk Assessment INTERIORS INSULATION INSPECTIONS Insulation Materials Asbestos Identification in Buildings Asbestos Pipe Insulation Asbestos-Free Insulation Materials Balsam Wool Batt Insulation Cotton Insulating Batts Cellulose loose fill insulation Fiberglass Insulation Foam Board Insulation Foam Spray Icynene Insulation Insects & Foam Insulation Mineral Wool/Rock Wool Insulation Mold in Fiberglass Insulation Mold in Foam Insulation Paper Duct Insulation Perlite Insulation Urea Formaldehyde Foam Insulation UFFI Vermiculite Insulation Heat Loss Calculations Insulation Material Identification Guide Insulation R-Values & Properties LIST of Asbestos Containing Products Mold Growth Resistance of Foam Insulation INSULATION INSPECTIONS Asbestos Pipe Insulation Vermiculite Insulation Asbestos-Free Insulation Materials Cotton Insulating Batts Cellulose loose fill insulation Fiberglass Insulation Insects & Foam Insulation Mineral Wool/Rock Wool Insulation Mold in Fiberglass Insulation Mold in Foam Insulation More Information InspectAPedia TM Home & Site Map Air Conditioning InspectAPedia Bookstore Electrical Environment Exteriors Heating Home Inspection Insulate Ventilate Interiors Mold Inspect/Test Plumbing Water Septic Roofing Structure Accuracy & Bias Pledge Contact Us |
More Information on Asbestos Contamination, Other Airborne Fiber Hazards, & Building Diagnostic Inspections and Repairs
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08/28/2008 - 01/07/06 - www.inspect-ny.com/interiors/Rock_Wool_Insulation.htm - Web page design & content © 2007 Daniel Friedman All Rights Reserved