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Sound Insulation | SonaVyx

ISO 16283 / ISO 717-1

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Sound Insulation Measurement: ISO 16283, R'w, and STC Explained

Sound insulation measurement is the process of quantifying how effectively a building element (wall, floor, ceiling, door, window, or facade) reduces the transmission of airborne sound from one space to another. The primary international standard for field measurement of airborne sound insulation is ISO 16283-1, which replaced the older ISO 140-4 in 2014. This standard defines the procedures for measuring sound pressure levels in the source and receiving rooms, applying background noise corrections, and calculating single-number ratings that describe the insulation performance of the separating element.

The measurement process requires generating a broadband noise source (typically pink noise) in the source room, measuring the spatially averaged sound pressure level L1 at multiple microphone positions, then measuring the spatially averaged sound pressure level L2 in the receiving room at multiple positions. The level difference D = L1 - L2 is the raw measure of sound reduction. However, this raw difference depends on the acoustic conditions in the receiving room (its reverberation time and absorption), so ISO 16283-1 defines two standardised descriptors that normalise for these conditions.

Key Metrics: R'w vs DnT,w vs STC

The apparent sound reduction index R' is calculated from the level difference, the area of the separating element S, and the equivalent absorption area A in the receiving room: R' = D + 10 log10(S/A). The equivalent absorption area is derived from the room volume and reverberation time using the Sabine equation: A = 0.163 V / T. The weighted value R'w is obtained by fitting the ISO 717-1 reference curve to the 1/3-octave band R' values according to the curve-shifting procedure defined in the standard. Spectrum adaptation terms C (for pink noise) and Ctr (for traffic noise) are calculated per Annex A of ISO 717-1 and reported alongside R'w.

The standardised level difference DnT normalises the level difference to a reference reverberation time of 0.5 seconds: DnT = D + 10 log10(T / T0). This descriptor is preferred in UK and Nordic building regulations because it reflects the actual acoustic conditions experienced by occupants. The weighted value DnT,w is obtained using the same ISO 717-1 curve-fitting procedure applied to the DnT values.

The Sound Transmission Class (STC) is the North American equivalent, defined by ASTM E413. STC uses a similar contour-fitting method but with a different reference curve shape and frequency range (125 Hz to 4000 Hz). The STC contour is shifted upward in 1 dB increments until either the sum of deficiencies exceeds 32 dB or any single deficiency exceeds 8 dB. In practice, STC and R'w values for the same partition typically differ by only 1-2 dB.

Background Noise Correction and Measurement Quality

Accurate sound insulation measurement requires that the signal level in the receiving room is well above the background noise floor. ISO 16283-1 Annex A specifies that if the difference between the signal+noise level and the background noise alone is at least 10 dB, no correction is needed. If the difference is between 6 and 10 dB, an energy subtraction correction is applied. If the difference is less than 6 dB, the result is flagged as potentially unreliable and a default 1.3 dB correction is applied. SonaVyx performs these corrections automatically when you measure background noise in Step 4 of the wizard.

Building Code Requirements Worldwide

Building codes worldwide specify minimum sound insulation requirements for separating elements between dwellings. The IBC (International Building Code) used throughout the United States requires STC 50 for walls and floor/ceiling assemblies between dwelling units. European countries adopt national annexes to EN 12354, with typical requirements of R'w 52-55 dB. UK Building Regulations Part E requires DnT,w + Ctr of at least 45 dB for new-build separating walls between dwellings. German DIN 4109 mandates R'w of 53 dB. Australian BCA/NCC requires Rw + Ctr of 45 dB, increasing to 50 dB in some states. The SonaVyx compliance checker allows you to instantly verify your measurement results against any of these codes.

By combining sound insulation measurement with RT60 reverberation analysis, room scanning, and professional report generation, the SonaVyx platform provides a complete building acoustics toolkit for architects, acoustic consultants, building inspectors, and contractors. All measurements run entirely in the browser using a Rust-compiled WebAssembly DSP engine, eliminating the need for expensive dedicated hardware while delivering results traceable to ISO 16283 and ISO 717 procedures.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between R'w and STC?
R'w (weighted apparent sound reduction index) is defined by ISO 717-1 and is the primary metric used internationally for rating airborne sound insulation. STC (Sound Transmission Class) is the ASTM E413 equivalent used primarily in North America. Both compare measured 1/3-octave band transmission loss data against a reference contour, but the frequency range, reference curve shape, and deficiency calculation rules differ slightly. R'w uses 100-3150 Hz while STC uses 125-4000 Hz. In practice, R'w and STC values for the same partition are typically within 1-2 dB of each other.
How does ISO 16283 differ from the older ISO 140?
ISO 16283 replaced ISO 140 in 2014 and introduced several improvements for field measurement. Key changes include low-frequency procedures (50-80 Hz bands using corner measurements), default use of reverberation time for DnT,w calculations instead of absorption area, improved guidance on measurement positions and averaging, and provisions for small rooms. ISO 16283-1 covers airborne sound insulation, Part 2 covers impact sound, and Part 3 covers facade sound insulation.
Why do I need to measure background noise?
Background noise correction per ISO 16283-1 Annex A ensures that the measured sound pressure level in the receiving room reflects only sound transmitted through the partition, not ambient noise from HVAC, traffic, or other sources. If the difference between the measured level and the background noise is less than 10 dB, a correction is applied. If the difference is less than 6 dB, the measurement at that frequency band may be unreliable and is flagged. Without this correction, the apparent insulation performance would be underestimated.
What is the minimum R'w or STC required between apartments?
Requirements vary by jurisdiction. The IBC (International Building Code, USA) requires a minimum STC 50 for walls and floor/ceiling assemblies between dwelling units. In Europe, EN 12354 national annexes typically require R'w >= 52-55 dB. UK Building Regulations Part E requires DnT,w + Ctr >= 45 dB for new-build separating walls. German DIN 4109 requires R'w >= 53 dB. Australian BCA/NCC requires Rw + Ctr >= 45 dB (increased to 50 dB for Class 2/3 buildings in some states). Always check your local building code for the applicable requirement.
Can I get accurate results using phone microphones?
Phone microphones provide useful indicative measurements for comparative assessments, screening surveys, and preliminary design verification. For formal compliance testing to ISO 16283, a calibrated Class 1 or Class 2 sound level meter with 1/3-octave band analysis is required. The SonaVyx platform compensates for typical smartphone frequency response characteristics and clearly labels results as indicative. For critical regulatory submissions, results should be verified with calibrated equipment by a qualified acoustician.
How many measurement positions do I need?
ISO 16283-1 requires a minimum of 5 source positions and 5 microphone positions in the source room, and 5 microphone positions in the receiving room (plus 2 additional positions for low-frequency correction if applicable). The source should be placed in at least 2 different locations. SonaVyx guides you through multiple measurement positions and spatially averages the results. More positions improve measurement accuracy by better sampling the sound field in each room.