ASTM E90 Laboratory Measurement of Airborne Sound Transmission Loss of Building Partitions and Elements
ASTM E90 test method is part of a set for evaluating the sound-insulating properties of building elements. It is designed to measure the transmission of sound through a partition or partition element in a laboratory.

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- Overview
- Scope, Applications, and Benefits
- Test Process
- Specifications
- Instrumentation
- Results and Deliverables
Overview
ASTM E90 is a test procedure for evaluating the sound blocking capacity of walls, partitions, and other space-dividing elements. It measures the amount of sound passing through the air that is attenuated by the walls. It measures how well a building assembly reduces sound passing from one room to another.
It measures the transmission loss of the building by using sound pressure levels in reverberation chambers.

Scope, Applications, and Benefits
Scope
ASTM E90 describes how we test, in a lab, how well building parts will stop airborne noise. It examines walls of all types, movable partitions, floor ceilings, doors, windows, roofs, panels, and other building parts that separate spaces. This test procedure provides frequency-dependent transmission loss test results, which are obtained in a controlled lab environment.
Applications
- Acoustic performance evaluation of building materials
- Building code compliance testing
- Product certification and labeling
- Wall and partition system development
- Door and window acoustic testing
- Floor-ceiling system performance validation
- Research and development of sound-insulating assemblies
- Quality assurance in construction materials
Benefits
- Provides standardized acoustic performance measurement
- Determines frequency-dependent transmission loss
- Supports building acoustics design
- Enables product comparison under controlled conditions
- Improves indoor noise control
Test Process
Installation and Sound Generation
The specimen is installed between two reverberation rooms, and a diffuse sound field is generated in the source room.
1Sound Transmission
Sound strikes the specimen, causing vibration and transmission into the receiving room.
2Measurement
Sound pressure levels are measured in both rooms, and absorption in the receiving room is determined.
3Data Processing
The test may be repeated with room positions reversed, and results are averaged to obtain final transmission loss values.
4Technical Specifications
| Parameter | Details |
|---|---|
| Measurement Output | Transmission Loss (TL), dB |
| Frequency Analysis | Measured in multiple frequency bands |
| Test Environment | Dual reverberation room suite |
| Specimen Installation | Built into frame or test opening |
| Primary Measurement | Sound pressure level difference and room absorption |
Instrumentation Used for Testing
- Reverberation room test suite (source and receiving rooms)
- Broadband sound source
- Power amplifier
- Microphones
- Sound level meters or data acquisition system
- Signal generator
- Acoustic absorption measurement equipment
- Data analysis software
Results and Deliverables
- Frequency-dependent transmission loss (dB)
- Averaged transmission loss values (if dual-direction testing performed)
- Acoustic performance report
- Comparative test analysis
- Laboratory test report
Frequently Asked Questions
ASTM E90 is a test used to determine the sound transmission loss of building partitions in a controlled laboratory setting. The test measures the ability of walls, windows, doors, or floor assemblies to reduce airborne sound in specific frequency ranges.
Optimal room volumes are required to provide a diffuse field with an equal distribution of energy. This will reduce standing waves and room effects, ensuring that the sound reduction measured is a function of the partition's acoustic properties rather than room effects.
The sound transmission loss is determined by the difference between the average sound pressure levels in the source and receive rooms, taking into account the specimen area and the absorption in the receive room.
Yes, ASTM E90 shows the existence of frequency-specific sound insulation losses, including coincidence dips. Coincidence dips exist where panel motion is in phase with airborne sound wavelengths, thus aiding in material selection decisions based on panel stiffness, mass, and damping.
ASTM E90 represents ideal laboratory conditions and does not account for installation defects or flanking transmission. Field performance may differ, requiring additional evaluation for completed buildings or complex construction assemblies.
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