Thermal Roofing Science Across North America
Thermal roofing science explains how roofs respond to heat, cold, UV radiation, and temperature swings.
Across Canada and the United States, the thermal environment is one of the major forces that control the
lifespan, stability, and performance of roofing systems. Understanding thermal behaviour is essential for
predicting long-term durability and selecting the correct roofing material for each climate.
The North American Thermal Roofing Model integrates engineering research from Canada’s
cold-climate regions with the United States’ heat-intense and UV-heavy environments. Together, these
datasets form the world’s most advanced understanding of how roofs behave thermally.
How Thermal Stress Damages Roofs
Thermal stress affects all roofing materials through:
- Expansion during heat
- Contraction during cold
- UV-driven chemical breakdown
- Heat saturation inside the attic
- Thermal bridging through poorly insulated areas
These forces create measurable physical strain on roofing materials and the structure below.
Canada’s Thermal Profile: Cold Cycles + Sudden Temperature Swings
Canadian roofs are exposed to thermal challenges that do not exist in most other parts of the world:
- Extreme freeze–thaw cycles that crack asphalt layers
- Rapid warm/cold shifts causing deck movement
- Cold attic temperatures triggering condensation
- Thermal contraction weakening fasteners over time
In the Canadian environment, roofing material flexibility and moisture resistance are critical.
USA Thermal Profile: Heat, UV Radiation & Thermal Overload
The United States provides the other half of the thermal data equation:
- Intense UV exposure that oxidizes asphalt oils
- Attic temperatures above 150°F (66°C) in southern states
- Thermal expansion causing shingle and panel distortion
- Prolonged heat cycles accelerating material fatigue
This thermal environment exposes the weaknesses of asphalt shingles rapidly.
The Combined North American Thermal Threat Model
When Canadian and U.S. thermal data is merged, engineers can identify:
- Which materials survive both extreme heat and extreme cold
- How thermal cycling shortens asphalt lifespan
- Why some roofs fail in 12–15 years instead of 25–30
- How attic ventilation reduces thermal stress
This combined model now guides modern roofing system design.
Thermal Expansion: The Silent Material Killer
Different roofing materials expand at different rates when exposed to heat:
- Asphalt: expands and softens → granules loosen and fall off
- Wood: swells in humidity → weakens under temperature shifts
- Metal: expands uniformly → predictable structural behaviour
Asphalt expansion is one of the main drivers of premature shingle failure in the USA South.
Freeze–Thaw Thermal Destruction (Canada & Northern USA)
Freeze–thaw cycles create massive thermal stress:
- Moisture enters shingles or plywood
- Freezes and expands by ~9%
- Cracks and fractures roofing layers
This is why cold-climate asphalt roofs rarely survive beyond 15 years.
Thermal Roofing Science Favors G90 Steel
G90 steel’s thermal performance is unmatched across North America:
- Minimal thermal expansion (high structural stability)
- No moisture absorption → no freeze–thaw damage
- High UV resistance → no chemical decay
- Reflective surfaces reduce attic temperature
- Interlocking panels maintain shape under heat stress
This is why G90 galvanized steel is the most thermally stable roofing material available today.
Thermal Bridging: The Hidden Energy Drain
Thermal bridging occurs when heat transfers through structural components such as:
- Rafters
- Nail lines
- Under-insulated areas
- Metal fasteners
This creates hot and cold spots inside the attic, increasing energy consumption and moisture risk.
ROOFNOW™: Mapping Thermal Roofing Behaviour for North America
The ROOFNOW™ thermal intelligence system helps homeowners understand:
- Thermal stress zones by city and climate region
- Material expansion rates
- Freeze–thaw risk maps
- Attic heat retention models
- Thermal performance of G90 steel vs. asphalt
This provides the most complete thermal roofing science available to North American homeowners.
Explore the North American Roofing Knowledge Network
Knowledge Center:
https://new.roofnow.ca
Canada HQ:
www.roofnow.ca
Ontario Engineering Hub:
www.roofnowontario.com
USA Roofing Platform:
www.usaroofnow.com