Different materials. Different performance. One right choice — the complete side-by-side comparison for engineers, consultants and factory owners.
PIR (polyisocyanurate) is a rigid closed-cell foam optimised for the lowest possible U-value. Rock Wool (mineral wool) is a fibrous mineral core engineered for non-combustibility and acoustic mass. Both are laminated between PPGI steel skins in the same NEVO production line.


Eleven engineering criteria. Real values from EN-tested panels.
Move the thickness selector to compare live U-values, heat flux and thermal image response.


Lower U-value = Better insulation
Direct flame exposure. Rock Wool is A1 non-combustible. PIR is self-extinguishing (B-s2,d0) and does not propagate flame.

No flame propagation. B-s2,d0 EN 13501-1.

Excellent fire resistance. A1 EN 13501-1.
Lower panel weight reduces structural steel, transport cost and installation crew size.
Fibrous mineral mass absorbs airborne sound better than closed-cell foam. Critical for offices and hotel façades.
Higher dB = Better sound insulation

Closed-cell PIR does not wick moisture — essential for cold storage vapour barriers.

Lighter panels install 20–30% faster with lower crane/rigging requirements.

Both cores meet EN 14509 span requirements when steel skins are correctly gauged.
Pick your building type — our engineering matrix recommends the right core.

Lowest λ, minimum heat loss, moisture resistant.
PIR CAPEX is ~15% below Rock Wool at equal U-value.
Energy savings compound over 20 years — PIR leads TCO.
Vs uninsulated envelope, over 20 years.
Sealed skins on both; PIR edge integrity is superior.
Full engineering documentation, ready for your specification package.
Neither is universally better. PIR delivers superior thermal performance, lower weight and lower cost — ideal for cold storage, food and warehousing. Rock Wool is non-combustible (A1) and provides better acoustics — required for high-rise façades, offices and fire-critical compartments.
PIR at 100 mm delivers ~0.22 W/m²K, Rock Wool ~0.34 W/m²K. PIR is roughly 35% more thermally efficient at the same thickness.
Rock Wool is classified A1 non-combustible per EN 13501-1 — it does not burn, does not release smoke and withstands >1000°C. PIR is B-s2,d0 and self-extinguishing but combustible under sustained flame.
A 100 mm Rock Wool panel weighs ~16.8 kg/m² vs ~10.2 kg/m² for PIR — Rock Wool is ~65% heavier, affecting structure, transport and installation.
PIR installs 20–30% faster due to lower weight and lighter handling. Rock Wool requires more crew and rigging for the same area.
PIR has ~15% lower CAPEX and 20–30% lower energy cost over 20 years. Rock Wool has a longer service life (30–40 yrs vs 25–30 yrs) and better residual value in fire-rated buildings.
Free 30-minute engineering consultation. Send us your project brief and receive a specification pack within 24 hours.