Hi, I don't think it differs from any other materials. You just need to find the physical property of each material (thermal conductivity, mass, etc) and input that in E+. Then create constructions based on those materials. I'm quite sure there is literature on the subject. The only thing is that literature might define ranges, or there might be differences between sources, as the actual properties of these materials depends on the know-how or "recipe" of the person creating it. It won't be as definitive as looking at a spec sheet for a particular brand of fiberglass batts. It's the same for concrete by the way... Even ashrae tells you that light concrete is between x and y, not some absolute value. Good luck Best, Julien Envoyé de mon iPhone Le 18 mai 2015 à 18:16, "ana5patil@xxxxxxxx [EnergyPlus_Support]" <EnergyPlus_Support@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> a écrit :
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