Aerated concrete (AAC) block wall
A single-leaf wall of autoclaved aerated concrete (AAC) blocks: a mineral conglomerate expanded in an autoclave, where millions of closed air micro-cells lower the conductivity to insulant-grade values while it remains a load-bearing, non-combustible material. Extremely light and workable, it is laid in a thin bed and combines structure, weather seal and thermal insulation in a single layer.
Technical section of the system, from inside (left) to outside (right).
A single-leaf wall of autoclaved aerated concrete (AAC) blocks: a mineral conglomerate expanded in an autoclave, where millions of closed air micro-cells lower the conductivity to insulant-grade values while it remains a load-bearing, non-combustible material. Extremely light and workable, it is laid in a thin bed and combines structure, weather seal and thermal insulation in a single layer.
Aerated concrete - or autoclaved aerated concrete (AAC) - comes from a mix of cement, lime, very fine sand and water, to which an expanding agent (aluminium powder) is added that develops bubbles of hydrogen. The mix «rises» like bread, is then cut into blocks and steam-cured in an autoclave. The result is a mineral material more than eighty per cent made of air, dense with closed cells, that carries load and insulates at the same time.
The conductivity of a solid drops sharply if it is filled with still air. In AAC the micro-cells, closed and evenly distributed, continually interrupt the path of heat through the solid matrix and prevent convective motion: the conductivity falls to 0.09-0.13 W/mK, panel-insulant values in an element that is also structure. The very low density (300-500 kg/m³) makes the block light and easy to handle, cut and rout with hand tools.
The blocks, ground to flat parallel faces, are laid with a thin-bed adhesive-mortar joint a few millimetres thick combed on, often with dry tongue-and-groove interlocks on the vertical joints. The thin joint is essential: a traditional thick-bed mortar, far more conductive than the block, would sew back a grid of thermal bridges. Lintels, ring beams and reveals are solved with «U»-shaped blocks used as permanent formwork and with insulating elements that restore continuity.
AAC is non-combustible (Euroclass A1) and, for the same thickness, offers high fire resistance: it is the material of choice for compartments. It is, however, very porous and absorbs water readily, so it must be protected from driving rain and rising damp with breathable plasters, water-repellent plinths and a proper detachment from the ground. Fixings also need care: the low density calls for specific large-surface anchors, while concentrated loads must be spread.
Why it works
Thermal gradient · closed air cellsIn the cellular block the temperature falls gently and continuously: millions of closed air micro-cells break the path of heat through the mineral matrix and stop convection, so a single layer insulates and bears at once. The dew point lands in the breathable external plaster, where moisture dries outward, while the mass of the block keeps the inner face warm and delays the summer heat.
Conductivity λ of masonry blocks
Comparison · insulantsNodal details
Critical junctions · sectionsThe ground blocks, with flat parallel faces, are bonded with a few-millimetre adhesive joint combed onto the bed; the vertical joints interlock dry with a tongue and groove. The thin joint avoids the thermal bridge of a thick mortar bed.
- AAC block (ground face)
- Tongue-and-groove interlock
- Thin-bed adhesive mortar
- Horizontal bed joint
- Closed air cells
Over the opening a «U»-shaped AAC block is used as permanent formwork: it is reinforced and filled with concrete to form the lintel, keeping the same material on the face so the insulation stays continuous and no thermal bridge is created.
- AAC block (top course)
- U-block lintel (permanent formwork)
- Concrete + reinforcement
- Opening reveal
- Window frame
- Insulation continuity (same material)
Installation controls
Specification · checklist01 · First course & plinth
02 · Thin-bed laying
03 · Cuts & chases
04 · Lintels & ring beams
05 · Fixings & finish
Recurring defects
Diagnostics · siteComponent materials
The network · materialsReference regulations
3 norms- D.P.R. 380/2001Consolidated Building Act (Testo Unico Edilizia)In force
- D.M. 16/02/2007Fire-resistance classification of construction products and elementsIn force
- UNI EN 13501-1:2019Fire classification of construction products and building elements - Part 1: Reaction to fireIn force
Informational links to the regulatory framework. Always verify the current text on the official source.