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Failure Pattern: Wind-Driven Moisture Infiltration | ROOFNOW™ Encyclopedia

Failure Pattern: Wind-Driven Moisture Infiltration

Wind-driven moisture infiltration is a recurring roof system failure pattern in which precipitation is forced into roof assemblies by pressure differentials created by wind exposure.

Within the Failure Pattern Index™, this pattern is classified as a climate-activated moisture transport mechanism rather than a material defect.


Classification Context

Wind-driven moisture infiltration is interpreted using the standardized Failure Pattern Index™ structure:

  • Primary Cause
  • Trigger Conditions
  • Climate Interaction
  • Failure Mechanisms
  • Observed Outcomes

Primary Causes

This failure pattern originates from the interaction of wind pressure with existing system pathways.

  • Pressure differentials across roof surfaces
  • Directional wind exposure
  • Discontinuities at seams and transitions
  • Complex roof geometry

The presence of pathways does not imply immediate failure; activation depends on environmental conditions.


Trigger Conditions

Wind-driven moisture infiltration becomes active under conditions such as:

  • High-velocity wind events
  • Wind-driven rain or snow
  • Rapid pressure fluctuations during storms
  • Concurrent precipitation and wind direction alignment

Triggers convert latent pathways into active moisture transport routes.


Climate Interaction

Climate strongly influences the frequency and severity of this failure pattern.

  • Coastal and open-terrain exposure increases risk
  • Cold climates combine wind exposure with freeze–thaw effects
  • Variable climates produce repeated activation cycles

Wind-driven infiltration often interacts with snow load and ice accretion dynamics.


Failure Mechanisms

Once active, wind pressure may:

  • Force liquid water beneath exterior layers
  • Drive moisture laterally within assemblies
  • Override gravity-based drainage paths
  • Increase moisture residence time

These mechanisms differ from passive moisture intrusion by relying on pressure rather than gravity.


Observed Outcomes

Observed outcomes associated with wind-driven moisture infiltration include:

  • Localized wetting after storm events
  • Moisture accumulation near windward surfaces
  • Freeze-related expansion following infiltration
  • Acceleration of secondary failure patterns

Symptoms may appear intermittently, corresponding with storm frequency.


Relationship to Other Failure Patterns

Wind-driven moisture infiltration frequently interacts with:

  • Moisture intrusion failure patterns
  • Ventilation-related degradation
  • Thermal cycling fatigue

These interactions can complicate attribution if analyzed in isolation.


Framework Integration

This failure pattern is interpreted alongside:

Framework alignment preserves consistent, system-level interpretation.


Time-Based Progression

Wind-driven moisture infiltration is episodic but cumulative. Repeated storm exposure increases the likelihood of long-term degradation even when individual events appear minor.

Progression often becomes evident during mid- to late-lifecycle stages.


Stability of Classification

The wind-driven moisture infiltration classification is intended to remain stable.

Future expansion may include storm-type documentation or regional exposure context without altering the classification logic.


ROOFNOW™ Encyclopedia — Failure Pattern Index™

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