RoofViews

Commercial Roofing

Roof Coating Systems—What They Are and How to Calculate Just What You Need

By Dawn Killough

May 10, 2021

A roofer applying a roof coating

Even structurally sound roofs may show the effects of weathering and UV damage. Roof coating systems can help protect and extend the life of existing roofing systems.

What kinds of roof coatings should you consider for your roof? And, just as importantly, how do you know how much coating you need for your roof?

Types of Roof Coatings

GAF offers a variety of roof coating systems made with acrylic, silicone, and polyurethane. Below are the key features of each type of system.

  • Acrylic coatings are an ideal solution for structurally sound roofs in need of restoration. Products such as GAF's RoofMate coating can be used on a variety of substrates to help protect the substrate against weathering and UV damage. Additionally, some acrylic coatings systems are fabric-reinforced for an extra layer of protection.
  • Silicone coatings, like GAF's line of Unisil silicone coatings, help protect the substrate against weathering and UV damage while also providing protection against leaks due to ponding water. Silicone coatings provide strong adhesion to many substrates, and come in both high solid and low solid varieties.
  • Polyurethane coatings, like GAF's line of Elastuff coatings, provide an excellent balance of tensile strength, elongation, and hardness. Their hard finish makes them well-suited for installations that require high abrasion, impact, and chemical resistance.

Calculating How Much Coating You Need

The amount of coating a project calls for will depend on a number of factors, including the type of coating, the size of the roof, the substrate being coated, the specific needs of the building, the goals of the owner, and the desired warranty or guarantee coverage. Installers can refer to GAF's Quick Specs and GAF's Application & Specifications Manuals to determine the number of coats and the dry film thickness required to meet the desired warranty or guarantee term. The application manual is also a great reference to identify proper substrate preparation and application techniques.

GAF has a new resource to help contractors, building owners, and distributors estimate the amount of coating needed for a particular project. According to GAF Product Marketing Manager Dave Rubin, the coverage calculator will help when "a contractor is out in the field or in their distributor's showroom and they need to quickly run a calculation."

The calculator is available to help estimate HydroStop acrylic membrane as well as Unisil silicone products. For Unisil silicone products, the calculator is located on the bottom of the individual product web pages. There's no sign-up required, and the tool is accessible from any device that has Internet, including mobile phones and tablets.

To calculate the amount of coating needed, follow the prompts in the tool. You'll need the following information:

  • Project name (optional)
  • Whether the project is located in Florida (and therefore subject to certain specific local code requirements)
  • Type of substrate
  • Square footage of roof to be covered
  • Linear feet of perimeter
  • Linear feet of curbs and penetrations
  • Parapet wall height in feet
  • Desired warranty period

With the information above, the tool can help estimate the amount of coating, fabric, and flashings needed for a project based on the information provided. The report can be saved as a PDF or printed for your records. (For privacy purposes, none of your project or contact information is stored in the system.)

The calculator provides plenty of additional help to assist customers with their calculations, Rubin says.

"We help guide you through the process and give you information about how to properly measure a roof, if you need some guidance on that," he says. "The menu takes you to our preparation guides that provide detail behind the proper prep work needed before you're ready to apply a roof coating—including if primers are needed, what type of primers are needed, and how to properly clean the roof."

It's important to note that the results provided by the calculator are an estimate of the required amount of coating. The accuracy of the estimate depends on the accuracy of the information entered and is for guidance purposes only. Always confirm quantities prior to ordering and ensure you are following local building code requirements.

Coating Calculations Made Easy

GAF aims to support commercial roof installers and building owners with a quick and easy estimate of how much material they'll need for their project. Installers will still need to reference the Quick Spec and application guides for specific information on substrate preparation, application instructions, coverage rates and required thickness and warranty or guarantee options—but Rubin says GAF hopes to give contractors more confidence in their calculations and make the process simpler.

About the Author

Dawn Killough is a freelance writer in the construction, finance, and accounting fields. She is the author of an ebook about green building and writes for construction tech and green building websites. She lives in Salem, Oregon with her husband and four cats.

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The input on the far left is a given number of kilograms of carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2e) generated for the flight, from the manufacturing of the airplane, to the fuel it burns, to its maintenance. The output is the flight itself, which creates CO2 emissions, but no durable good. In this case, the only CO2 reduction strategy you can make is to make fewer or shorter flights, perhaps by consolidating visits, employing a local designer of record, or visiting the building virtually whenever possible. Now consider the wallpaper you might specify for your client's building. It involves a discretionary expenditure of CO2e, in this case, used to produce a durable good. However, this durable good is a product without use-phase benefits. In other words, it cannot help to save energy during the operational phase of the building. It has other aesthetic and durability benefits, but no operational benefits to offset the CO2 emissions generated to create it. Your choices here are expanded over the previous example of an airplane flight. You can limit CO2 by choosing a product with a long useful life. You can also apply the three Rs: reduce the quantity of new product used, reuse existing material when possible, and recycle product scraps at installation and the rest at the end of its lifespan. In the final step in our thought experiment, consider the insulation in your client's building. As before, we must generate a certain amount of CO2e to create a durable good. In this case, it's one with use-phase benefits. Insulation can reduce operational energy by reducing heat flow through the building enclosure, reducing the need to burn fuel or use electricity to heat and cool the building. The good news is that, in addition to the other strategies considered for the flight and the wallpaper, here you can also maximize operational carbon savings to offset the initial embodied carbon input. And, unlike the discretionary nature of some flights and the often optional decision to use furnishings like wallpaper, heating and cooling are necessary for the functioning of almost all occupied buildings.Based on this example, you can consider building products with operational benefits, like insulation, as an "investment." It is appropriate to look at improving the building enclosure and understanding what the return on the investment is from a carbon perspective. As the comparison above demonstrates, if you have a limited supply of carbon to "invest", putting it into more roof insulation is a very smart move compared to "spending" it on a discretionary flight or on a product without use-phase carbon benefits, such as wallpaper.This means we should be careful not to measure products like insulation that save CO2e in the building use-phase savings only by their embodied carbon use, but by their total carbon profile. So, how do we calculate this?Putting It to the TestWe were curious to know just how much operational carbon roof insulation could save relative to the initial investment of embodied carbon required to include it in a building. To understand this, we modeled the US Department of Energy's (DOE) Standalone Retail Prototype Building located in Climate Zone 4A to comply with ASHRAE 90.1-2019 energy requirements. We took the insulation product's embodied energy and carbon data from the Polyisocyanurate Insulation Manufacturers Association's (PIMA) industry-wide environmental product declaration (EPD).To significantly reduce operational carbon, the largest carbon challenge facing buildings today, the returns on the investment of our building design strategies need to be consistent over time. This is where passive design strategies like building enclosure improvements really shine. They have much longer service lives than, for example, finish materials, leading to sustained returns.Specifically, we looked here at how our example building's roof insulation impacted both embodied and operational carbon and energy use. To do this, we calculated the cumulative carbon savings over the 75-year life of our model building. In our example, we assumed R-30 insulation installed at the outset, increased every 20 years by R-10, when the roof membrane is periodically replaced.In our analysis, the embodied CO2e associated with installing R-30 (shown by the brown curve in years -1 to 1), the embodied carbon of the additional R-10 of insulation added every 20 years (too small to show up in the graph), and the embodied carbon represented by end-of-life disposal (also too small to show up) are all taken into account. About five months after the building becomes operational, the embodied carbon investment of the roof insulation is dwarfed by the operational savings it provides. The initial and supplemental roof insulation ultimately saves a net of 705 metric tons of carbon over the life of the building.If you want to see more examples like the one above, check out PIMA's study, conducted by the consulting firm ICF. The research group looked at several DOE building prototypes across a range of climate zones, calculating how much carbon, energy, and money can be saved when roof insulation is upgraded from an existing baseline to current code compliance. Their results can be found here. Justin Koscher of PIMA also highlighted these savings, conveniently sorted by climate zone and building type, here.Support for Carbon Investment DecisionsSo how can you make sure you address both operational and embodied carbon when making "carbon investment" decisions? We've prepared a handy chart to help.First, when looking at lower-embodied-carbon substitutions for higher-embodied-carbon building materials or systems (moving from the upper-left red quadrant to the lower-left yellow quadrant in the chart), ensure that the alternatives you are considering have equivalent performance attributes in terms of resilience and longevity. If an alternative material or system has lower initial embodied carbon, but doesn't perform as well or last as long as the specified product, then it may not be a good carbon investment. Another consideration here is whether or not the embodied carbon of the alternative is released as emissions (i.e. as part of its raw material supply or manufacturing, or "cradle to gate" stages), or if it remains in the product throughout its useful life. In other words, can the alternative item be considered a carbon sink? If so, using it may be a good strategy.Next, determine if the alternative product or system can provide operational carbon savings, even if it has high embodied energy (upper-right yellow quadrant). If the alternative has positive operational carbon impacts over a long period, don't sacrifice operational carbon savings for the sake of avoiding an initial embodied product carbon investment when justified for strategic reasons.Last, if a product has high operational carbon savings and relatively low embodied carbon (lower-right green quadrant), include more of this product in your designs. The polyiso roof insulation in our example above fits into this category. You can utilize these carbon savings to offset the carbon use in other areas of the design, like aesthetic finishes, where the decision to use the product may be discretionary but desired.When designing buildings, we need to consider the whole picture, looking at building products' embodied carbon as a potential investment yielding improved operational and performance outcomes. Our design choices and product selection can have a significant impact on total carbon targets for the buildings we envision, build, and operate.Click these links to learn more about GAF's and Siplast's insulation solutions. Please also visit our design professional and architect resources page for guide specifications, details, innovative green building materials, continuing education, and expert guidance.We presented the findings in this blog in a presentation called "Carbon and Energy Impacts of Roof Insulation: The Whole[-Life] Story" given at the BEST6 Conference on March 19, 2024 in Austin, Texas.References:Architecture 2030. (2019). New Buildings: Embodied Carbon. https://web.archive.org/web/20190801031738/https://architecture2030.org/new-buildings-embodied/ Carbon Leadership Forum. (2023, April 2). 1 - Embodied Carbon 101. https://carbonleadershipforum.org/embodied-carbon-101/

By Authors Elizabeth Grant

September 18, 2024

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