The heat is made possible in two ways.
How to heat concrete floors.
Cerazorb acts as a moisture resistant barrier that does not absorb water or swell under the effects of heat.
While hot water and air based radiant.
Unlike heat from a forced air system which quickly rises to the ceiling the heat from a radiant floor is distributed evenly throughout the room and is concentrated at floor level where people are.
Due to it s density and low conductivity concrete retains heat very well.
How does radiant heat work.
This is about installing hydronic radiant floor heating in a slab floor system.
You can step onto a warm and inviting floor even one built on a concrete slab by adding in floor heating.
With concrete floor radiant heat your home will no longer have hot or cold spots just even quite draft free heat.
The system works via pex pipe a small pump a water heater and a thermostat.
For concrete floor radiant heating systems the warm water tubing or electric heating elements can either be embedded within the slab on grade anywhere from the bottom of the slab to within 2 inches of the surface depending on the design and installation technique or fastened to the top of a concrete subfloor and then covered with an overlay.
The first thing to consider when looking into different types of concrete floors is why it s so important to insulate the floor slab.
There s two basic types of concrete floor heating hydronic and electric.
Check out this article for a list of slab edge insulation solutions and episode 125 for my interview with henry edney of maxraft.
While it was done as a new house was being built in my last house i poured a concrete floor on top of a wood framed floor system and could have put radiant heat in that as well.
Up to 80 of heat loss in a floor slab occurs around the edges.
The most common application however is an in floor heating system installed between the finished concrete slab and the flooring above.
How to add floor heating over existing concrete.
Radiant floor heating concrete slab insulation.
Cerazorb is a 3 16 inch 5 mm thin synthetic cork underlayment that is highly recommended when installing a floor heating system over an existing concrete slab or under tile and stone.
The most cost effective system for medium to larger homes is hydronic since the amount of power it would take to heat a whole home with electric would be substantial.