fRsi Condensation Risk Check (EN ISO 13788)

Find the coldest interior surface point of a detail and verify it against mould and condensation criteria.

What fRsi Is

Cold spots on interior surfaces — at thermal bridges, window reveals, corners — are where mould grows and condensation forms first. EN ISO 13788 assesses this with the temperature factor at the internal surface:

Formula (EN ISO 13788)

fRsi = (Tsi,min − Te) / (Ti − Te)
where Tsi,min is the lowest interior surface temperature, Ti the interior air temperature and Te the exterior air temperature. fRsi is dimensionless, between 0 and 1 — higher is safer.

Because the factor is normalized, it characterizes the detail, not the weather: you compute it once and compare it against the minimum value fRsi,min required for your climate and indoor humidity. National regulations set practical thresholds — for example fRsi ≥ 0.72 in the Polish technical conditions (WT), and a critical factor of 0.75 is commonly used for dwellings in the UK. Always check the requirement that applies to your project.

Step 1 — Model the Detail

Draw or import the 2D cross-section exactly as for a ψ-value calculation: full layer build-ups, cut-off planes at least 1 m from the disturbance (EN ISO 10211 model rules apply to the temperature calculation too), materials from the EN ISO 10456 library.

Step 2 — Boundary Conditions for a Condensation Check

Like Ψ, fRsi is independent of the chosen temperature pair in a linear steady-state model — but the surface resistances do change it, so use the EN ISO 13788 values, not the heat-loss values.

Step 3 — Solve and Read fRsi

Mesh and solve. ThermX computes fRsi automatically and marks the critical point — the coldest interior surface location — directly on the canvas, and the Results panel shows the value with a pass/fail indication. Hover the canvas to read surface temperatures anywhere else.

Step 4 — Interpret the Result

⚠️ Scope

The fRsi method covers surface condensation and mould risk. Interstitial condensation (inside the construction) is a separate EN ISO 13788 procedure (Glaser method) that a steady-state thermal model alone does not answer.

🔥 Try it yourself

ThermX costs €10 one-time and runs on Windows, macOS, Linux — and in your browser. Download ThermX or open it in your browser — the fRsi check runs automatically on every solve.