Sound Absorption Calculator

Sound absorption determines how quickly acoustic energy decays in a room, directly affecting reverberation time, speech intelligibility, and music clarity. SonaVyx calculates total absorption using both the Sabine formula (best for live rooms) and the Eyring formula (more accurate for well-treated rooms), incorporating a database of 55 materials with per-octave-band absorption coefficients from 125 Hz to 4 kHz per ISO 354 measurements.

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Open the full treatment calculator — design your acoustic treatment plan.

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Technical Specifications

ParameterValueStandard
Sabine FormulaT60 = 0.161 * V / AISO 3382-2
Eyring FormulaT60 = 0.161V / (-S * ln(1-alpha))More accurate high-alpha
Frequency Bands125, 250, 500, 1k, 2k, 4k HzISO 354 octave bands
Material Database55+ materials, 8 categoriesPublished alpha coefficients
NRC CalculationAverage of 250-2000 HzASTM C423
SAA CalculationAverage of 200-2500 Hz (12 bands)ASTM C423-17
Room VolumeL x W x H (metric or imperial)User input

How to Calculate Absorption

1

Enter Room Dimensions

Input the room length, width, and height. The calculator computes volume (V) and total surface area (S) for a rectangular room. For irregular rooms, you can manually enter volume and surface area.

2

Define Surface Materials

Assign materials to each surface (floor, ceiling, four walls). Select from the built-in database of 55 materials including concrete, drywall, carpet, acoustic panels, glass, and specialty treatments. Each material has per-octave absorption coefficients.

3

Add Furnishings and People

Add absorption from furniture, curtains, seats, and expected audience. People contribute significant absorption, especially in the 500-4000 Hz speech range. A seated person provides approximately 0.45 sabins of absorption across the speech bands.

4

Review RT60 Results

The calculator displays RT60 at each octave band using both Sabine and Eyring formulas. Compare against target values for your room type: studios (0.3-0.5s), classrooms (0.6-0.8s), concert halls (1.5-2.5s). Identify frequency bands that need more treatment.

5

Iterate and Optimize

Swap materials on surfaces to see how RT60 changes. Add acoustic panels or bass traps to specific surfaces. The calculator instantly updates, letting you optimize the treatment plan before purchasing materials.

Understanding Sound Absorption

Sound absorption is the process by which acoustic energy is converted to heat as sound waves interact with materials. The absorption coefficient (alpha) ranges from 0 (perfect reflection) to 1.0 (perfect absorption). Porous materials like fiberglass and acoustic foam absorb sound through viscous friction as air molecules oscillate in the material pores. Membrane absorbers like drywall panels flex and convert sound energy through internal damping.

Sabine vs Eyring: When Accuracy Matters

Wallace Sabine derived his formula by assuming that sound energy decreases uniformly with each reflection. This assumption breaks down when absorption is high because the remaining energy after each reflection is no longer proportional to the original. Carl Eyring corrected this by using the natural logarithm of (1 - alpha_avg), which properly accounts for the exponential decay of energy in absorptive rooms. For rooms with alpha_avg below 0.2, both formulas give similar results. Above 0.3, Eyring is significantly more accurate.

Frequency-Dependent Treatment Design

Effective room treatment requires addressing absorption across all frequency bands. Thin porous absorbers (1-2 inches) primarily absorb mid and high frequencies. Thick porous absorbers (4+ inches) or absorbers spaced away from the wall extend effectiveness to lower frequencies. Bass traps in corners target room modes below 200 Hz. Helmholtz resonators target specific narrow frequency bands. A balanced approach uses a mix of absorber types to achieve uniform RT60 across the spectrum.

Absorption Calculator Comparison

FeatureSonaVyxSmaart v9REWOSM
Sabine RT60YesNoYes (room sim)No
Eyring RT60YesNoYesNo
Material database55+ materialsNoYes (limited)No
Per-band calculationYes (6 bands)NoYes (6 bands)No
Browser-basedYesNoNoNo
Measurement integrationYes (compare to RT60)N/AYesN/A
PriceFree$898FreeFree

Frequently Asked Questions

Related Tools & Resources

Standards References

  • ISO 354:2003 — Measurement of sound absorption in a reverberation room
  • ASTM C423-17 — Standard test method for sound absorption and sound absorption coefficients (NRC, SAA)
  • ISO 3382-2:2008 — Room acoustics: Reverberation time in ordinary rooms
  • ISO 11654:1997 — Sound absorbers for use in buildings: Rating of sound absorption (alpha_w)