Quantifying moisture transport through building envelope materials is vital for durability, energy efficiency, and healthy indoor environments. Water vapour diffusion resistivity (µ-value) is a key parameter for hygrothermal modelling, moisture control, and mould risk assessment. Globally, data for solid wood species are scarce, and in Australia—despite the rising use of plantation-grown timber—critical hygrothermal properties remain undocumented. To close this gap, this study experimentally evaluated Eucalyptus nitens, a plantation-grown hardwood widely used in Australian construction. Solid-wood specimens prepared from industry-sourced boards were tested at 23 °C and 50% RH using both the wet-cup and dry-cup methods of the gravimetric technique. For wet-cup tests, µ-values ranged from 24 to 33; for dry-cup tests, µ-values ranged from 179 to 273, showing clear variability linked to differences in relative humidity. Experimental issues included surface cupping, sealing integrity, and extended equilibration time during dry-cup testing. These findings provide the first empirical µ-value dataset for E. Nitens under moderate-humidity conditions, delivering essential input parameters for hygrothermal models and supporting moisture-safe, energy-efficient design strategies for the broader construction sector.
Al-Shammaa et al. (Mon,) studied this question.