Articles tagged “eyring equation”
7 articles covering eyring equation in acoustic engineering and building design.
Architectural Acoustic Design: The Student Guide (With Free Calculation Tools)
Written for architecture and engineering students, this guide covers sound behaviour, absorption, reflection, diffusion, the Sabine and Eyring equations derived from first principles, common assignment types, and a fully worked lecture theatre design example using free tools.
Free RT60 Calculator Online — No Signup, Instant ISO 3382 Results
Calculate reverberation time free online. ISO 3382-2 compliant. Sabine + Eyring equations. RT60 per octave band 125Hz–4kHz. WELL v2 Feature 74 compliance check included. No signup required.
Reverberation Time Calculator Using Sabine Formula — Free, Instant, No Signup
Free Sabine reverberation time calculator. Enter room volume and surface absorption — get T60 instantly. Shows calculation steps. Compares Sabine vs Eyring for your specific room. ISO 3382-2 methodology.
RT60 Complete Reference — History, Physics, Measurement, Standards, and Optimal Values
The definitive RT60 reference covering the history from Sabine's 1900 experiments, the physics of exponential decay, measurement methods per ISO 3382-2, Sabine vs Eyring vs Fitzroy equations with worked examples, T20/T30/EDT definitions, optimal values for 20+ room types, and famous rooms with their measured RT60 values.
Deriving Sabine's and Eyring's Reverberation Time Formulas from First Principles
Step-by-step mathematical derivation of Sabine's T60 = 0.161V/A and Eyring's T60 = -0.161V/(S·ln(1-ᾱ)) from the diffuse field energy balance. With worked examples showing why Sabine fails at high absorption and when Eyring is the better choice.
Sabine vs Eyring: When to Use Each RT60 Formula and How Big the Error Can Be
Sabine overestimates RT60 by 15-40% in rooms with high absorption. Eyring corrects this but breaks down in rooms with very non-uniform absorption. Here is a worked comparison for 5 room types showing exactly when each formula is appropriate and the magnitude of the error when you choose wrong.
Your RT60 Calculation Is Probably Wrong — And Sabine's Formula Is Why
Sabine's equation overestimates reverberation time by 15–40% in rooms with average absorption above 20%. Here is the Eyring correction, why it matters, and a worked example showing how large the error is in a treated meeting room.