CURING POR 15

Juz sayin but what you are claiming does not make sense

If you have a VENTED heater, the only affect it will have on humidity is whatever combustion air it draws in that infiltrates from OUTdoors. So indoor humidity will be affected by cold dry (if it is dry) air coming in from outdoors. When you heat a cold room (and there is "no" outdoor infiltration) relative humidity decreases with heat. But the "actual" total water content does not change

If you have an UNvented heater such as a torpedo or infra-red, that will ADD humidity because the products of combustion contain humidity--and lots of it

I don't know anything about POR-15 and humidity but if you really do need more, you could do something like a hotplate and a big pan of water and just heat/ boil it into the air
The air up here is cold and dry. The ceiling hung propane furnace exhausts outside, but gets it's combustion air from inside. Since it is consuming inside air during the combustion process, it draws the dry cold air in from outside. Since warm air has the ability to hold more moisture, it pulls the moisture from everything in the room. That air gets used for combustion and is replaced by the dry air from outside. As the cycle progresses throughout the winter, it just keeps getting dryer. That's the way I see it anyways......and my hygrometer reads 10% RH.