Damp proofing

A metal damp proof course between the stone foundation and brick wall

Damp proofing in construction is a type of moisture control applied to building walls and floors to prevent moisture from passing into the interior spaces. Damp problems are one of the most frequent problems encountered in homes.

Overview

DPC visible between concrete foundation and brickwork.

Damp proofing is defined by the American Society for Testing and Materials (ASTM) as a material that resists the passage of water with no hydro-static pressure and waterproof as a treatment that resists the passage of water under pressure.[1] Generally damp proofing keeps moisture out of a building where vapor barriers keep interior moisture from getting into walls. Moisture resistance is not necessarily absolute: it is usually defined by a specific test method, limits, and engineering tolerances.

Damp proofing is accomplished several ways including:

Materials

Materials widely used for damp proofing include:[5]

Masonry construction

A DPC is a durable, impermeable material such as slate, felt paper, metal, plastic or special engineered bricks[6] bedded into the mortar between two courses of bricks or blocks. It can often be seen as a thin line in the mortar near ground level. To create a continuous barrier, pieces of DPC or DPM may be sealed together. In addition, the DPC may be sealed to the DPM around the outside edges of the ground floor, completely sealing the inside of the building from the damp ground around it.

In a masonry cavity wall, there is usually a DPC in both the outer and inner wall. In the outer wall it is normally 150 millimetres (5.9 in) to 200 millimetres (7.9 in) above ground level (the height of 2-3 brick courses). This allows rain to form puddles and splash up off the ground, without saturating the wall above DPC level. The wall below the DPC may become saturated in rainy weather. The DPC in the inner wall is usually below floor level, (under a suspended timber floor structure), or, with a solid concrete floor, it is usually found immediately above the floor slab so that it can be linked to the DPM under the floor slab. This enables installation of skirting boards above floor level without fear of puncturing it. Alternatively, instead of fitting separate inner and outer DPCs, it is common in commercial housebuilding to use a one-piece length of rigid plastic, (albeit an angled section), which fits neatly across the cavity and slots into both walls (a cavity tray). This method requires the need for weep vents to enable rainwater ingress to drain from the cavities otherwise rising dampness could occur from above the DPC.

Concrete walls and floors

Concrete normally allows moisture to pass through so a vertical damp proof barrier. Barriers may be a coating or membrane applied to the exterior of the concrete. The coating may be asphalt, asphalt emulsion, a thinned asphalt called cutback asphalt, or a rubber polymer.[7] Membranes are rubberized asphalt or epdm rubber. Rubberized products perform better because concrete sometimes develops cracks and the barrier does not crack with the concrete.

Remedial damp proofing

Until the 20th century masonry buildings in Europe and North America were generally constructed from highly permeable materials such as stone and lime-based mortars and renders covered with soft water-based paints which all allowed any damp to diffuse into the air without damage. The later application of impermeable materials which prevent the natural dispersion of damp, such as tiles, linoleum, cement and gypsum-based materials and synthetic paints is thought by some to be the most significant cause of damp problems in older buildings.[8]

There are many solutions for dealing with dampness in existing buildings, the choice of which will largely be determined by the types of dampness that are affecting the building (e.g. rising damp, hygroscopic damp, condensation, penetrating damp etc...). These are described in more detail under Damp (Structural).

Health and safety

Some DPC materials may contain asbestos fibres. This was more commonly found in the older, grey sealants as well as flexible tar boards.

Other possibly hazardous materials include the use of lead sheets as a DPC material.

References

  1. Greenlaw, Bruce. "Moisture-Proofing New Basements", Foundations and concrete work. Newtown, CT: Taunton Press, 2003. 93. Print.
  2. http://www.timberwise.co.uk/damp-proofing-solutions/
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 Punmia, B. C., A. K. Jain, and Arun Kumar Jain. Building construction. 10th ed. New Delhi: Laxmi Pub., 2008. 631. Print.
  4. "Damp-proof membrane (dpm, DPM)" def. 1. Gorse, Christopher A., and David Johnston. A dictionary of construction, surveying, and civil engineering. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012. 104. Print.
  5. P.C. Varghese (2005). Building Materials. PHI Learning Pvt. Ltd. p. 230. ISBN 81-203-2848-5.
  6. Curtin, William George. Structural masonry designers' manual. 3rd ed. revised Oxford: Blackwell Science, 2008. 314. Print.
  7. Greenlaw, Bruce. "Moisture-Proofing New Basements", Foundations and concrete work. Newtown, CT: Taunton Press, 2003. 93-101. Print.
  8. Society of the Protection of Ancient Buildings. "Technical Q&A 20: Rising Damp". Retrieved 16 July 2013.
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