Wssix99; Thanks for the terminology clarification. Yes I do plan on pouring a few inches of concrete between the inner and outer grade boards. Mostly to keep the interior walls from touching the floor and wicking up water. My plan for insulating between the poles was to dig say 2' down and put rigid foam board between the concrete and ambient air.
Great. So, you would have an inner grade board that would keep your floating slab (with the radiant tubing in it) isolated from the wall cavity? If so, you could insulate the edges of your slab by putting some foam board on either side of that grade beam.
As you follow that insulation around the side of the slab to your door opening, you'll come to the problem....
You'll want to continue that edge insulation across your threshold to make a thermal break and lay out your foam edge insulation for the slab in such a way that:
- The door falls on top of or outside of that foam (on non-heated concrete)
- Your floating slab is a perfect rectangle/square shape (if you have any jogs/corners in the slab to put the thermal break where you want it, that will create a "reentrant corner" and will promote cracking in your slab)
The end result of this is that either you will have a small section of floating threshold that just sits between your driveway and slab or hat your driveway comes through your door opening a bit. (I'd be inclined to isolate the threshold from the driveway with an expansion joint and pin the two together so you control cracking. (This will create reentrant corners outside your structure and will promote cracking in the driveway if you don't isolate the threshold.)
I have a 1" piece of foam board that creates the thermal break between my concrete threshold and my radiant slab. After the floor cured, I carved out the top bit of that foam, filled the gap with Slab Gasket (below), and then sealed the edges with Sikaflex. It's been phenomenal.
http://slabgasket.com/slab-gasket-gallery/index.php