Technical Column

The Design Logic Behind the Inverse Square Law Zone in Anechoic Chambers

Nov 7, 2025

Acoustic Power Measurement

Introduction

When measuring sound pressure levels in an anechoic chamber, the most fundamental assumption is the Inverse Square Law—that sound energy decreases by 6 dB each time the distance doubles.

However, this rule only holds in an ideal free-field.
In real anechoic environments, factors such as absorption limits, sound source size, and frequency cause deviations from ideal conditions.

This article explains how to design and verify the region where the Inverse Square Law is valid, also known as the K₂ correction zone, according to ISO 3745 and related standards.

What Is the Inverse Square Law?

For a point source in a free field, the sound pressure level decreases as:

where LpL_pLp​ is the sound pressure level at distance rrr, and Lp1L_{p1}Lp1​ is the level at a reference distance r1r_1r1​.
The region where this relationship holds is called the Inverse Square Law Zone.

Why It Fails in Real Anechoic Rooms

Even high-performance anechoic chambers are not perfect free fields.
Deviations occur due to:

  • Limited low-frequency absorption
  • Extended or directional sound sources
  • Measurement within the near field
  • Residual reflections from walls or structures

Therefore, determining where the law actually holds is critical for reliable measurements.

Defining the Valid Measurement Distance

According to ISO 3745 and JIS Z 8732, the transition from near field to far field is given by:

where DDD is the maximum source dimension and λ\lambdaλ is the wavelength.
Larger sources and lower frequencies require proportionally greater distances to maintain free-field conditions.

Practical Design Considerations

To achieve a valid inverse-square region, both the chamber and the test setup must be designed carefully:

  • Adequate low-frequency absorption (below 200 Hz)
  • Proper source–microphone distance (typically 1–2 m)
  • Symmetrical microphone arrangement
  • Obstacle-free measurement axis

Meeting these design criteria ensures compliance with ISO 3745 Class 1 or Class 2 accuracy standards.

Understanding K₂ Correction

In practice, deviations from the ideal law are quantified as K₂ values, representing the difference between theoretical and measured sound decay.
K₂ should be within ±1.5 dB (Class 1) or ±2.5 dB (Class 2).

A stable K₂ indicates both acoustic integrity of the chamber and reliability of measurement results.

Conclusion: Designing Distance for Accuracy

An anechoic chamber is not merely a “quiet room.”
It is a precisely engineered environment that enables accurate acoustic measurement.

Designing the correct Inverse Square Law zone means designing for trustworthy data—linking architectural silence with metrological precision.

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