The most well-known feature of mineral wool is its non-combustibility. Like masonry, mineral wool is resistant to fire.  For this reason, it is recommended particularly behind combustible claddings and in walls with non-combustible claddings. While mineral wool is often used for fire-stopping at openings and penetrations at a minimum, it can certainly be used in the entire wall as continuous insulation. At Owens Corning, we are still quantifying acoustic performance, but existing studies demonstrate significant acoustic performance compared to foam plastic insulation which may contribute to better-performing exterior walls–particularly behind low mass, thin materials such as metal or plastics. As mentioned earlier, the vapor permeable qualities of mineral wool allow for vapor inside the building to dissipate. And used as a continuous insulation, mineral wool does not limit design options like foam plastics. Â
As mentioned earlier, mineral wool ci can be used beneath multiple cladding types. Often, masonry veneer is integrated with terra cotta to contribute special accent features, and the same or similar trades are installing these materials. Terra cotta may be attached with traditional ties, but is increasingly attached with unitized cladding attachment systems engineered to resist live and dead loads placed on the terra cotta. These systems allow for a faster installation with the ability to adjust as the installation occurs. In these types of applications, foam plastic may have originally been specified because higher compressive strength was required. Yet as terra cotta is now manufactured with more hollow components, it is no longer considered a high-mass material capable of providing thermal protection to the combustible plastics below.
As a result, mineral wool has increasingly become the choice for continuous insulation below terra cotta. Traditionally, mineral wool products were specified by density rather than compressive strength — for example, the foam plastic counterparts as a way of resisting compression when attachments were secured through the material. However, the manufacturing processes have changed to create lower density mineral wools with the same or better compressive strengths.
As a result, the specification language must also evolve to indicate the design needs of compressive strength over simply specifying the density of the material. Following up on these building science findings, Owens Corning® Thermafiber® recently introduced three new high compressive strength Thermafiber® Rainbarrier®ci offerings, providing AEC professionals with a comprehensive portfolio of compressive strengths to meet the demands of various claddings.Â