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Most advice about residential soundproofing includes interventions like: - Hang curtains/tapestries/blankets on the walls. - Put up acoustic foam (like what podcasters use) if you're really desperate. - Put down thick rugs/carpets.
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These all sound pretty reasonable! I'm willing to spend some money on this problem and would tolerate bad aesthetics for good performance, so I started looking into various acoustic foams/insulation.
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The standard performance measure for acoustic insulation is NRC (noise reduction coefficient), which measures the average sound absorption of the material. A low NRC means that the material reflects most of the sound energy back, while a high NRC means it doesn't.
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This sounded good to me but I couldn't find any mapping of NRC values to expected reductions in sound intensity (e.g., in decibels). 🤔 That seemed suspicious, and then I realized that that's because that comparison doesn't make any sense!
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Thinking back to wave mechanics, three things can happen to sound energy when it hits a new material: it can be reflected, absorbed, or transmitted. (Image credit: Government of Wisconsin)
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Acoustic foams, carpets, tapestries, and so on all do a good job of reducing sound reflection in a room. This is useful if you're trying to record since it reduces the amount of reflection that the mic will pick up. It's also useful in echo-y spaces like gyms.
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None of those are good at reducing the amount of transmitted sound, though. The main thing that materials with high STC ratings have in common is that they're heavy: lots of mass to move means that lots of sound energy is expended moving the heavy thing, so less gets through.
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(There are a few techniques that go beyond that, like special glues that convert sound energy into heat, but in broad strokes, a high STC means that it's heavy.)
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I'm pretty sure that the standard advice for reducing noise in a bedroom should be "hang mass-loaded vinyl" (basically just vinyl impregnated with metals to make it heavy), not "put up tapestries". Unfortunately hanging heavy things is more difficult, expensive, and destructive.
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And of course it worries me that I hadn't noticed this distinction before, and just sort of absorbed the advice that was "in the air" about what soundproofing is. It's kinda embarrassing that I'd never thought this through.
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One funny conclusion: this explains why sticking your head into a pillow to block out someone using a leafblower at 7:30am doesn't usually work. A pillow probably has a pretty good NRC, but a low STC!
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Mostly I think that "soundproofing" and "sound absorption" are bad words that might mean two different things. Straw proposal: materials like acoustic foam "block echos" while materials like concrete and mass-loaded vinyl "are hard for sound to get through".