What is a sandwich panel and why it is the core of any cold room?

A sandwich panel is a composite building element with two metal skins and a rigid thermal insulation core in between. In refrigeration projects, this assembly forms the building envelope that controls heat gain and moisture behavior.

In Saudi summer conditions, external air temperature may approach 50 C while the room can operate at -30 C. This very high delta temperature means panel specification directly affects compressor run hours, electricity cost, and long-term system reliability.

Choosing low-grade panel systems can cause progressive efficiency loss, condensation risk, and shorter plant life. A specification-based approach is essential.

Basic engineering principle: with large temperature difference, every additional centimeter of effective insulation reduces total thermal load and operating cost over the full life cycle of the facility.

Insulation core types: PUR vs PIR vs EPS

Insulation core performance drives the panel thermal behavior. Three common options are used in the market, with distinct fire, moisture, and long-term stability characteristics.

A. PUR (Polyurethane)

Widely used with good thermal conductivity and balanced cost. Suitable for standard cooling and medium freezing in many projects.

B. PIR (Polyisocyanurate)

Improved chemistry relative to PUR, usually offering better fire behavior and thermal stability. It is commonly preferred for deep-freeze and higher compliance projects.

C. EPS (Expanded Polystyrene)

Lower-cost option with weaker thermal performance and higher moisture sensitivity over time. Usually not recommended for serious industrial freezing applications.

Property PUR PIR EPS
Thermal conductivity lambda (W/m.K) 0.022-0.025 0.020-0.023 0.035-0.040
Density (kg/m3) 38-42 40-45 15-25
Fire behavior Medium Better Weak
Moisture absorption Very low Very low Medium to high
Temperature range +80 to -40 C +120 to -50 C +70 to -20 C
Relative cost Medium Medium to high Low
Typical use General cooling and freezing Deep and industrial freezing Light cooling only

Elfarida Ice recommendation: for industrial freezer rooms, PIR in walls and ceiling with higher-density floor system provides a practical performance and durability balance.

Thickness selection table by temperature and Saudi climate

Required thickness must be selected using target room temperature, ambient conditions, and insulation thermal conductivity, not generic catalog values.

Room Type Temperature Range PUR Thickness PIR Thickness Target U-Value
Fruit and vegetable cooling +2 to +8 C 80-100 mm 80 mm <= 0.28 W/m2.K
Meat and dairy cooling 0 to +4 C 100 mm 100 mm <= 0.25 W/m2.K
Pre-cooling -2 to +2 C 120 mm 100 mm <= 0.22 W/m2.K
Medium freezing -18 to -20 C 150 mm 120 mm <= 0.18 W/m2.K
Deep freeze -25 to -30 C 200 mm 150-180 mm <= 0.14 W/m2.K
Blast freezing -35 to -40 C 250 mm 200 mm <= 0.11 W/m2.K
Floor system As per room class +25-50 mm extra +20-40 mm extra Load-adjusted

Saudi design note: very hot ambient conditions typically require thicker or better-performing panel systems than many mild-climate reference tables.

U-value and practical calculation method

U-value represents total heat transfer through one square meter per degree of temperature difference. Lower U-value means better insulation and lower energy use.

The simplified model uses serial thermal resistance terms.

U = 1 / R_total

R_total = R_si + R_facing1 + R_core + R_facing2 + R_se

// Core resistance:
R_core = t_insulation / lambda_insulation

In practice, better lambda and greater thickness reduce U-value and directly lower compressor load.

Daily heat loss calculation

A quick estimation can be performed using envelope area, U-value, and total temperature difference.

Q_loss = U x A_total x DeltaT x 24

// Daily energy impact scales strongly with both U and DeltaT.

Meaning in operation: reduced daily thermal gain accumulates into major annual electricity savings, often exceeding initial panel upgrade cost over project lifetime.

External cladding options and applications

Cladding selection controls corrosion resistance, cleanability, and long-term durability under project conditions.

Cladding Type Typical Thickness Applications Main Benefits Limitations
Painted galvanized steel 0.4-0.6 mm General cold rooms Competitive cost Lower chemical resistance
Polyester-coated steel 0.5 mm Food and general cooling Good corrosion performance Requires careful handling
PVDF-coated steel 0.5-0.6 mm Harsh and coastal environments High UV and salt resistance Higher cost
Stainless steel 0.4-0.5 mm Hygienic plants and healthcare Excellent hygiene and corrosion resistance Highest cost
Aluminum 0.4-0.5 mm Roofs and wet environments Lightweight and rust-free Lower structural strength
FRP 1.0-1.5 mm Chemically aggressive plants Strong chemical resistance Heavier, less structural stiffness

Coastal note: in high-salinity zones, PVDF or stainless options on exposed faces significantly improve service life.

Panel joints and thermal leakage control

Joint lines are the most sensitive points for thermal bridging and air leakage. Installation quality is as critical as panel quality.

A. Tongue and groove / cam lock systems

Proper mechanical interlock with suitable gasketing minimizes leakage and improves effective in-service U-value.

B. Expanding foam sealant strategy

Closed-cell sealants are required around joints, corners, and penetrations to avoid moisture-driven insulation degradation.

C. Corners and penetrations detailing

Pipe and cable penetrations need engineered detailing; these points are frequent sources of hidden thermal loss.

Common mistake: continuous metal fasteners bridging exterior and interior faces create direct thermal bridges and should be avoided.

Floor panel special requirements and loads

Floor systems see heavy point loads, dynamic traffic, and moisture exposure. Their design criteria differ substantially from wall and ceiling panels.

Criterion Cooling Floor (+2 C) Freezing Floor (-18 C) Deep-Freezing Floor (-30 C)
Panel thickness 120-150 mm 150-200 mm 200-250 mm
Top face 0.5 mm galvanized steel 0.6 mm reinforced galvanized steel Reinforced steel or FRP
Distributed load 5 kN/m2 7.5 kN/m2 10 kN/m2
Forklift wheel point load 7 kN 10 kN 15 kN
Sub-floor requirement Moisture control Extra thermal layer + moisture barrier Under-floor heating + insulation

For deep-freeze projects, under-floor heating is often mandatory to prevent frost heave and structural damage beneath the slab.

Integrated floor solution: combine thermal insulation layer, moisture barrier, and controlled under-floor heating in deep-freeze rooms.

Saudi and Gulf environment design considerations

Regional climate introduces constraints beyond standard temperate-climate references.

A. High ambient temperature impact

Large temperature differences raise heat gain substantially, requiring stricter envelope design.

B. Coastal humidity and salt exposure

Elevated humidity with chloride exposure accelerates corrosion on insufficiently protected cladding.

C. Solar radiation on external faces

Light exterior colors and suitable coatings reduce absorbed heat under high summer sun.

D. Outdoor installation constraints

UV-resistant gaskets and exposed-joint protection are required for many freestanding outdoor rooms.

Condition Recommended Technical Response Cost Impact
Ambient >= 45 C Increase envelope performance relative to standard tables Panel premium
Coastal environment PVDF or aluminum on exposed outer faces Moderate premium
Outdoor installation UV-resistant gaskets and edge protection Low to moderate premium
Deep freeze with high ambient Higher-performance panel and floor heating strategy High premium

Required quality standards and certificates

Real panel quality must be proven by standards compliance and documented test performance, not catalog claims only.

A. European standards (EN)

  • EN 14509: sandwich panel product standard and key thermal/mechanical properties.
  • EN 13501-1: fire classification reference for panel systems.
  • EN 10169: organic coated steel requirements.
  • EN 15715: installation and field-performance related practices.

B. Additional certificates for food facilities

  • HACCP compliance: cleanability and hygiene suitability.
  • Food-grade declaration: where direct food-area suitability is needed.
  • GCC/SASO alignment: where required by project authority or scope.

C. Field quality verification tests

Typical checks include insulation density, thermal conductivity confirmation, and bond strength validation between core and facings.

Market caution: always request third-party test evidence with shipment documentation, especially for large industrial projects.

How to choose the right panel for your project

A reliable panel decision follows engineering sequence, not purchase price alone.

  1. Define operating temperature class with clear room duty profile.
  2. Set target U-value based on thermal load and refrigeration design margin.
  3. Select insulation core type based on performance and safety priorities.
  4. Select cladding system for the specific project environment.
  5. Verify certificates and test reports before procurement commitment.
  6. Evaluate life-cycle cost using purchase plus long-term energy impact.

Elfarida Ice service: we provide engineering support for panel specification, U-value targeting, supplier offer review, and practical life-cycle optimization. Contact us for a free consultation.

Sandwich Panel PIR Panel Cold Room Insulation Freezer Panel U-Value Refrigeration Construction