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Sound Physics & Acoustics

How Sound Works

Understanding the physics of sound is essential for effective soundproofing. Learn how sound travels, why some noise is harder to block, and the science behind solutions that work.

What Is Sound?

Sound is a mechanical wave—a disturbance that travels through a medium (air, water, or solid materials) by causing molecules to vibrate and transfer energy from one location to another.

SourceAir molecules vibrateEar

The Physical Process

1
A vibration occurs
A speaker cone moves, a door slams, footsteps hit the floor, or vocal cords vibrate.
2
Air molecules compress and expand
The vibration pushes air molecules together (compression) and pulls them apart (rarefaction), creating pressure waves.
3
Waves propagate
These pressure waves travel outward at approximately 343 m/s (1,125 ft/s) at room temperature.
4
Your ear receives the wave
Pressure waves hit your eardrum, causing it to vibrate. These vibrations convert to electrical signals your brain interprets as sound.

Key insight: Sound cannot travel through a vacuum because there are no molecules to vibrate. This is why if you can eliminate or disrupt the medium (air gaps, isolation), you can stop sound transmission.

Frequency & Wavelength

Not all sounds behave the same way. The frequency (pitch) of a sound determines how it travels, how easily it's blocked, and what materials are effective at stopping it.

Low (Bass)Long wavelengthHard to blockMid (Speech)Medium wavelengthModerate blockingHigh (Treble)Short wavelengthEasy to block
20–250 Hz
Low frequency
Bass, footsteps, traffic, subwoofers
λ = 13–56 ft
250–2,000 Hz
Mid frequency
Human speech, most instruments
λ = 6 in – 4.5 ft
2,000–20,000 Hz
High frequency
Treble, bird chirps, cymbals
λ = 0.6 – 6 in

Why low frequencies are hardest to block

  • Long wavelengths diffract easily: A 100 Hz wave (11 ft wavelength) easily wraps around door frames and wall gaps.
  • Requires massive barriers: Thin acoustic foam does essentially nothing against bass.
  • Penetrates materials: Low frequencies transfer energy into solids, causing walls to vibrate and re-radiate sound.

Decibels (dB)

Decibels measure sound intensity on a logarithmic scale, where each 10 dB increase represents a perceived doubling of loudness.

20 dB
Whisper
40 dB
Quiet room
60 dB
Conversation
80 dB
Traffic
100 dB
Concert
120 dB
Pain
QuietEvery +10 dB = 2× louderPainful
dBExample
10–20Rustling leaves, breathing
30Whisper, quiet library
40Refrigerator hum
50–60Normal conversation
70Vacuum cleaner, traffic
80Alarm clock, garbage disposal
90Lawnmower, power tools
100+Motorcycle, nightclub

Understanding the logarithmic scale

+3 dBDoubling of acoustic power (barely noticeable)
+10 dBPerceived doubling of loudness
+20 dB10× acoustic pressure, 4× perceived loudness
−10 dBPerceived half loudness — noticeable improvement

Airborne vs. Structure-Borne Sound

This is the most critical distinction for effective soundproofing. The two types require completely different treatment approaches.

Airborne Sound
IMPACTUpstairs floorStructure-Borne (Impact) Sound

Airborne Sound

Sound that travels through air until it strikes a barrier (wall, door, window). The barrier vibrates and re-radiates sound on the other side.

Examples
TV/MusicVoicesBarkingTrafficAircraft
Solutions
  • • Add mass (drywall, MLV)
  • • Seal gaps (weatherstripping, caulk)
  • • Absorption (insulation in cavities)
  • • Decoupling (resilient channels)

Structure-Borne (Impact)

Sound created by direct physical impact on the building. Vibration travels through solid materials at 10× the speed of airborne sound.

Examples
FootstepsDropped objectsFurnitureDoorsPlumbing
Solutions
  • • Source treatment (carpet, rubber pad)
  • • Decoupling (isolation clips)
  • • Damping (Green Glue)
  • • Foam panels don't work!

Key difference

Airborne: Travels at ~343 m/s through air. Blocked by mass and sealing. Foam has some effect.
Structure-borne: Travels at ~3,000–5,000 m/s through solids. Requires decoupling or source treatment. Foam is useless.

STC Ratings

Sound Transmission Class (STC) is a single-number rating that measures how well a partition reduces airborne sound. Higher STC = better sound blocking.

STC 25Hollow doorSTC 35Single wallSTC 45+ InsulationSTC 55+ Double drywallSTC 65DecoupledBetter soundproofing →
STCQualityWhat you hear
25–35PoorNormal speech clearly understood
38–42FairLoud speech heard but not understood
45–50GoodLoud speech faintly heard
50–55Very goodVery loud sounds barely heard
60+ExcellentShouting barely audible

Common construction STC values

  • Hollow-core door: STC 20–25
  • Single stud wall, no insulation: STC 33
  • Same wall + fiberglass: STC 39
  • Double drywall + insulation: STC 45–48
  • Decoupled wall: STC 50–55

STC limitations

  • • Only measures airborne sound, not impact
  • • Tested in ideal lab conditions
  • • Doesn't account well for low-frequency bass
  • • Real-world often 5–10 points lower
  • • Small gaps drastically reduce actual STC

The Four Principles of Soundproofing

All effective soundproofing uses one or more of these four mechanisms. The best solutions combine all four.

Mass
Absorption
Decoupling
Damping
1

Mass

Adding weight

Heavier materials are harder to vibrate. Mass resists sound wave energy, preventing transmission.

Double drywall (+6 STC)Mass-loaded vinylSolid-core doorsConcrete walls
2

Absorption

Dissipating energy

Porous materials trap sound waves, converting acoustic energy to heat through friction.

Fiberglass in cavitiesRockwool insulationHeavy curtainsAcoustic panels (echo only)
3

Decoupling

Breaking connections

Separating two sides of a barrier so vibrations can't mechanically transfer. The most powerful technique.

Resilient channelsIsolation clipsDouble-stud wallsFloating floors
4

Damping

Converting vibration to heat

Visco-elastic materials prevent panels from resonating and amplifying sound.

Green Glue (+5–9 STC)Damping matsMLV with damping

The Golden Formula: M-A-D-D

Combine all four principles for maximum soundproofing. A properly built wall can achieve STC 60+.

Mass
Double 5/8" drywall
Absorption
Rockwool in cavity
Decoupling
Resilient channels
Damping
Green Glue compound

Ready to apply this knowledge?

Explore our practical guides to find solutions that match your noise problem and budget.

How Sound Works: The Physics of Noise & Soundproofing | NoiseProofed | NoiseProofed