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Computed datasheet

PIR / PUR rigid foam at 100 °C — heat-loss table

λ = 0.028 W/m·K at mean temperature ((100+20)/2 = 60 °C, from the published curve). Pipe losses per metre, four thicknesses, savings vs bare.

Pipe30 mm W/m50 mm W/m80 mm W/m100 mm W/mBARE W/mSurface @50 mmSaving €/m·yr @50 mmt CO2/m·yr
DN251310878422 °C€360.13
DN50191411915223 °C€670.25
DN802518131222323 °C€1000.37
DN1003121161428723 °C€1300.47
DN1504329211842323 °C€1920.70
DN2005436252155124 °C€2510.92
DN3007650342981424 °C€3731.36

Assumptions: 20 °C ambient, still air (h=10 W/m²·K combined), €0.05/kWh fuel, 8000 h/yr, 82% efficiency, 0.183 kg CO2e/kWh (DESNZ 2024). Flat surfaces at this duty: bare 800 W/m² → 42 W/m² at 50 mm (≈€370/m²·yr saved). Method: ASTM C680 simplified — methodology. Your exact case: free calculator.

Context

All materials at 100 °C

Materialλ W/m·KLoss W/mSurfaceSaving €/m·yrt CO2/m·yr
Stone wool (mineral wool)0.0413125 °C€1250.5
Glass wool0.0382924 °C€1260.5
Ceramic fibre (RCF / AES blanket)0.0604427 °C€1190.4
Aerogel blanket0.0231823 °C€1310.5
Calcium silicate0.0564226 °C€1200.4
Expanded perlite0.0614527 °C€1180.4
Cellular glass0.0473525 °C€1230.4
Microporous (fumed-silica) panels0.0221723 °C€1320.5
Elastomeric foam (FEF)0.0403024 °C€1250.5
PIR / PUR rigid foam0.0282123 °C€1300.5
E-glass needle mat0.0453425 °C€1240.5
Silica needle mat / fabric0.0554126 °C€1200.4

DN100 pipe at 100 °C, 50 mm insulation, per metre of pipe; bare loss 287 W/m. λ at mean temperature; € and CO2 per metre·year at €0.05/kWh, 8000 h, 82% efficiency. Method: ASTM C680 simplified (h=10).

Material datasheet: PIR / PUR rigid foam → · temperature class: by temperature →

FAQ

Questions on this topic

How much heat does a pipe at 100 °C lose with pir / pur rigid foam?
With 50 mm at 100 °C (λ=0.028 at mean): DN50 loses 14 W/m, DN100 21 W/m, DN200 36 W/m — vs 287 W/m bare for DN100. Full table on this page.
What surface temperature does pir / pur rigid foam give at 100 °C?
≈23 °C with 50 mm on DN100 (20 °C ambient, still air). Personnel-protection targets (≤45–60 °C) may need more thickness — see the 80/100 mm columns.