Sound attenuation across materials...

Thread Starter

Externet

Joined Nov 29, 2005
2,630
Hi.
Do you know of some attenuation tables of sound crossing different materials ?
Like from air to air across 1mm vinyl barrier, or silicone barrier, glass, latex, polyethilene, oil, steel, aluminium... Or what to expect from microphones enclosed/behind varied materials.
And across different thicknesses of various materials ? I suppose the thickness of the barrier is directly proportional to the attenuation.
There is decent Wikipage on acoustic impedance, resistance, reactance, admittance, susceptance, conductance...
Does anyone know about tables ?
 

ebeowulf17

Joined Aug 12, 2014
3,307
I've got a book at home somewhere that has a lot of what you're describing, although I seem to remember it focusing on typical interior wall and floor materials more than silicone, latex, oil, etc. The book is called The Master Handbook of Acoustics, and it's brilliant! Regardless of whether or not it covers every material you're researching, I think it's an incredible resource and worth picking up.
 

#12

Joined Nov 30, 2010
18,224
I have sixteen ways to sound proof a room, and a book on controlling sound in a performance environment, but the various materials you seek are not in my inventory.:(
 

Thread Starter

Externet

Joined Nov 29, 2005
2,630
Thanks, guys.
Aiming the reverse of sound-proofing. Enclosing an electret microphone in a fully hermetic something long-lived material to protect from corrosive environment with least attenuation from the barrier.
Latex not being long-life, wondering about others like cellophane, kitchen wrap film...
 

Bernard

Joined Aug 7, 2008
5,784
Google - hydrophone construction. The one by UCONN, Simple Hydrophone Design looks interesting.
Prob. could make it simpler for 10 ft. depth.
 
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