Frequency absorption guide
1. Absorption as an energy budget
Absorption is the portion of incident wave power converted into heat or internal losses. In power balance mode the calculator uses measured incident, reflected, and transmitted power to compute absorbed power and an absorption coefficient. A passive setup yields a coefficient between 0 and 1.
2. Why frequency changes the outcome
Many materials absorb more strongly at higher frequency because frictional and relaxation processes occur more often per second. For acoustics, porous foams show rising absorption from hundreds of hertz into kilohertz bands. For electromagnetics, dielectric loss can grow with frequency depending on conductivity and polarization behavior.
3. Attenuation along a path
When you cannot measure reflected and transmitted power separately, attenuation mode estimates absorption from exponential decay along distance. The model uses P(x)=P0·e−2μx, where μ is the attenuation coefficient in Np/m. Doubling the path length doubles the exponent term, increasing loss quickly.
4. Converting between nepers and decibels
Engineers report loss in decibels. For power ratios the calculator uses L=10·log10(P0/Px). If you prefer amplitude loss, remember that 1 neper corresponds to about 8.686 dB for amplitude, and about 17.372 dB for power over the same exponent convention, so confirm the definition used in a data sheet.
5. Power‑law μ for broadband studies
Across a wide band, attenuation is approximated by μ=a·fb. The exponent b captures how rapidly loss rises with frequency; values near 1 indicate roughly linear growth, while b near 2 indicates a faster, quadratic‑like rise. Always input frequency in hertz to keep units consistent.
6. Interpreting coefficients and edge cases
If the power balance produces negative absorbed power, it usually means measurement uncertainty, calibration drift, or a gain element in the path. Likewise, coefficients above 1 indicate inconsistent inputs. Use the “Check” note to flag these cases, then re‑measure reflected and transmitted power or verify instrument averaging and bandwidth settings.
7. Practical data you can log
For repeatable testing, record temperature, humidity, sample thickness, and path length for each run. In many acoustic labs, absorption coefficients are reported at octave‑band center frequencies such as 125, 250, 500, 1000, 2000, and 4000 Hz. In RF work, log frequency, cable length, connector type, and termination quality.