Insulation Thickness Calculator

Insulation Thickness Calculator – Pipe & Duct Sizing Guide

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Insulation Thickness Calculator – Pipes & Ducts

Pipe & Duct Insulation Thickness – What this Calculator Does, How it Works, and How to Use It

This guide explains the physics behind the calculator, shows you how to use it (SI/Imperial), and walks through a complete real-world example—from blank inputs to final thickness, heat-loss, and cost.

Anti-condensation • Target heat-loss • SI/Imperial toggle • Standards presets • Costing

What problem does it solve?

Two big reasons we insulate pipes/ducts are to prevent condensation on cold services and to limit heat loss/gain on hot/cold services. The right thickness protects against dripping, corrosion-under-insulation (CUI), wasted energy, and comfort problems.

How the calculator works (under the hood)

  • 1) Physics model We use 1-D steady conduction through a cylindrical (pipe) or plane (duct) layer plus outside film coefficient. Internal film and metal wall are neglected for simplicity.
    Pipes: Rcond = ln(r₂/r₁)/(2πk), Rconv = 1/(heff·2πr₂), q′ = ΔT/(Rcond + Rconv).
  • 2) Condensation check Dew point via Magnus formula; surface temperature Ts = Tamb + q′·Rconv. For anti-condensation, we size so Ts ≥ Tdew + margin.
  • 3) Effective film coefficient External h includes a linearized radiation term: heff ≈ hconv + 4σ·ε·T³ (about ambient).
  • 4) Solving thickness Thickness is solved by bisection until either heat-loss target or anti-condensation surface temperature is met; then an optional safety factor inflates the recommendation.
  • 5) Costing Material cost is scaled by surface area and thickness relative to 25 mm reference rates (India/US/UK), with optional wastage and markup.
Methodology & formulas (compact)

Pipe (per meter): Rcond=ln(r₂/r₁)/(2πk), Rconv=1/(heff·2πr₂), q′ = ΔT/(Rcond+Rconv), Ts=Tamb+q′Rconv.

Duct (per meter): A=2(W+H), Rcond=t/(kA), Rconv=1/(heffA), q′ = ΔT/(Rcond+Rconv).

Magnus dew point: γ = aT/(b+T) + ln(RH/100), Tdew= bγ/(a−γ), with a=17.62, b=243.12 °C.

Linearized radiation: hrad ≈ 4σ·ε·T³ (T in K).

How to use the calculator (quick start)

  1. Pick Units — SI (mm, °C, W/m·K) or Imperial (in, °F, Btu·in/h·ft²·°F). The calculator converts on the fly.
  2. Choose a Standard (optional) — e.g., ASHRAE, CIBSE, ISO 12241, SMACNA. Defaults for ho, emissivity, and safety factor auto-populate (you can edit).
  3. Add Segment(s) — For each pipe or duct: enter service temp, ambient temp & RH, size (pipe OD / duct W×H), length, and insulation material (or k).
  4. Select ModeGiven Thickness → Heat loss, Target Heat Loss → Thickness, or Anti-Condensation → Thickness.
  5. Costing (optional) — Pick region (India/US/UK) and adjust wastage/markup. Rates are per m² at 25 mm and scale linearly with thickness.
  6. Review Results — KPIs (segments, total heat loss, cost, savings), a results table, and a quick chart of q′ vs thickness. Download a clean HTML report anytime.
Tip: Use presets for common cases (chilled water, hot water, steam, supply/return ducts, climate presets). You can rename segments and run multiple scenarios side-by-side (stacked on page).

Sample Project — Chilled Water Pipe (Full Calculation)

Goal: Prevent condensation and also limit heat gain to ≤ 10 W/m on a 2″ chilled water line indoors.

Given

Fluid / Service Temp (Thot)7 °C (chilled water)
Ambient (Tamb), RH26 °C, 65 % RH (indoor)
Pipe Size (OD)60.3 mm (2″ nominal)
Length30 m
Insulation MaterialElastomeric foam (NBR), k = 0.035 W/m·K
Surface Emissivity (ε)0.9 (typical black jacket)
External Convection hconv8.0 W/m²·K (still air, indoor)
Safety Factor1.10 (10 % on thickness)
Anti-Condensation Margin+2 K above dew point

Step 1 — Dew Point

Using Magnus: with T=26 °C and RH=65 %, Tdew18.91 °C. We want the outer surface ≥ 20.91 °C.

Step 2 — Effective h

Linearized radiation about ambient (σ=5.67×10⁻⁸, ε=0.9, T≈299.15 K): hrad5.46 W/m²·K. So heff = 8.0 + 5.46 ≈ 13.46 W/m²·K.

Step 3 — Anti-Condensation Thickness

We solve for t so the surface equals the target: Ts=Tamb+q′Rconv=20.91 °C (bisection on the cylindrical model).

ResultValue
tanti-cond (no safety)6.45 mm
t with 10% safety7.10 mm
q′ at t=7.1 mm≈ 15.8 W/m (heat gain into pipe)
Ts at t=7.1 mm≈ 21.0 °C

Step 4 — Energy Target Thickness

Target |q′| ≤ 10 W/m. Solving for thickness gives:

Target q′ (W/m)Required t (mm)
252.78
204.31
156.99
1012.96
Governing thickness is the larger of anti-condensation and energy target ⇒ 13 mm is a practical round-off.

Step 5 — Final Performance at 13 mm

q′ (per meter)≈ 9.98 W/m (vs uninsulated ≈ 48.46 W/m)
Surface Temperature≈ 23.27 °C (above 20.91 °C target)
Total Heat Gain (30 m)≈ 299 W (saved ≈ 1.155 kW vs uninsulated)

Step 6 — Material Cost (reference rates per m² @ 25 mm)

Surface area at 13 mm: A ≈ 8.13 m² for 30 m run (based on outer perimeter). Costs scale linearly with thickness (t/25 mm) with 5% wastage and 10% markup.

RegionRate @ 25 mmMaterial Cost (before W/MU)Est. Total
India₹ 650 / m²₹ 2,749₹ 3,175
USA$ 11.5 / m²$ 48.64$ 56.18
UK£ 10.0 / m²£ 42.29£ 48.85
Note: Figures are material-only references for elastomeric foam; add jacketing, labor, fittings, supports, and access allowances as required by your spec.
Final Thickness13 mm
q′ (per meter)≈ 9.98 W/m
Savings vs Uninsulated≈ 79.4 %
30 m Total Gain≈ 299 W

Good practice, standards & next steps

Citations (verify editions/clauses in your project):

  • ASHRAE Fundamentals — surface coefficients & calculation methods.
  • CIBSE Guide C — convective coefficients and typical data.
  • ISO 12241 — calculation rules for equipment & piping insulation.
  • SMACNA — HVAC duct design considerations and insulation practice.

“Values derived from <Standard>, clause <xx> (user must verify).”

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