Acoustic Treatment in HVAC: NC, RC, dBA Criteria and Practical Sound Attenuation

A perfectly-sized HVAC system that runs at 55 NC instead of 35 NC produces visible occupant complaints within weeks of opening. Acoustic treatment of HVAC is rarely budgeted upfront; retrofit treatment after construction costs 3-5× pre-construction installation. This guide covers the NC criteria, RC criteria, sound attenuation principles, and practical equipment selection for typical Indian office, hospitality, and healthcare projects.

Noise criteria — what NC means

NC (Noise Criterion) is the standard rating for steady-state HVAC noise in occupied spaces. It’s an octave-band-weighted threshold measured at 250-8,000 Hz.

Space type NC limit (ASHRAE recommended)
Concert hall / studio 15-20
Bedroom (residence/hotel) 25-30
Hospital patient room 25-30
Conference room 25-30
Open-plan office 35-40
Restaurant 35-40
Retail 35-45
Factory floor 50-60

For typical Indian office: NC 35 is the industry default. Above NC 40, complaints become routine.

RC vs NC — the more refined criterion

RC (Room Criterion) is a refinement of NC that captures both the steady noise level + spectral character (rumble, hiss, neutral). It’s essentially NC + descriptors.

RC value Description
25 Very quiet, neutral spectrum
30 Quiet office
35 Standard office
40 Cafeteria, gym

For most projects, NC alone is sufficient. RC matters in critical spaces (concert halls, recording studios, hospital ICU).

dBA vs NC — different standards

dBA (A-weighted decibels) is the more common public-health metric (used for OSHA noise + environmental noise regulation). NC is a more nuanced HVAC metric.

Approximate conversion: NC value + 8 ≈ dBA. NC 35 ≈ dBA 43.

For Indian projects: NBC 2016 cites dBA limits for occupational + environmental noise; ASHRAE specs cite NC for HVAC sources.

Sources of HVAC noise

Three principal categories:

1. Equipment noise

Fans (centrifugal + axial), compressors, motors. Generated at the source; transmitted through duct + structure.

Equipment Typical sound level (dBA at 1 m)
Window AC 50-60
Cassette AC 30-45
Ducted indoor AC 35-50
AHU large fan 65-85
Centrifugal chiller 80-95
Cooling tower 65-80
DG + radiator 95-110
Pump (large) 70-85

2. Duct-borne noise

Air-flow turbulence in ductwork. Increases with velocity:

  • 5 m/s ductwork: ~25 dBA contribution
  • 7 m/s: ~35 dBA
  • 9 m/s: ~45 dBA
  • 11 m/s: ~55 dBA

Above 7 m/s in occupied areas, audible duct noise becomes a problem.

3. Structure-borne noise

Vibration transmitted through building structure (concrete, steel) from equipment.

Practical attenuation strategies

Strategy 1: Equipment selection

Pick low-noise equipment from the start. Manufacturer “low-noise” or “ultra-quiet” lines are 5-10 dBA quieter than standard at modest cost premium (~10-15%).

For typical office: ducted indoor units at 35-40 dBA achievable; cassette units at 30 dBA achievable.

Strategy 2: Vibration isolation

  • Spring isolators on equipment-to-structure mounts (chillers, AHU, fan, pumps)
  • Flexible connectors at all equipment-to-pipe/duct interfaces (eccentric reducers, flex-coup)
  • Floating concrete slab below large equipment

Reduces structure-borne noise by 10-25 dBA at receiver.

Strategy 3: Duct treatment

  • Duct lining (acoustic mat inside duct walls, e.g., 25 mm fiberglass with mylar facing)
  • Sound attenuators (silencers in supply + return, particularly at AHU outlet)
  • Velocity reduction (oversized duct in critical areas to reduce velocity below 5 m/s)

Reduces duct-borne noise by 15-30 dBA depending on attenuator length + frequency.

Strategy 4: Plenum + barrier walls

  • Plant rooms with acoustic ceiling + walls (typical NRC > 0.85)
  • Sound-absorbing baffles in mechanical rooms
  • Mechanical-room walls rated STC 40-45 (separates from occupied)

Reduces breakout noise by 20-35 dBA at receiver.

Sound attenuator (silencer) design

Inside-duct silencers reduce noise by 15-30 dBA depending on:

  • Length (longer = more attenuation)
  • Cross-section shape (round vs rectangular)
  • Internal lining (perforated vs solid baffles)

Typical specifications:

  • 1 m long inline silencer: 15-20 dBA reduction at mid-frequency (500-2000 Hz)
  • 1.5 m long: 20-25 dBA
  • 2.0 m long: 25-30 dBA

For office AHU at 80 dBA, a 1.5 m silencer brings supply duct to 60 dBA at silencer outlet; further duct attenuation through bends + branches drops to ~35-40 dBA at diffuser.

Worked example: 1,000 m² Mumbai office

Goal: NC 35 in occupied zones.

Source levels:

  • AHU fan: 78 dBA at fan outlet
  • Compressor: 75 dBA contribution

Path:

1. Equipment-room insulation (NC 35 in adjacent space): -25 dBA

2. AHU silencer (1.5 m): -22 dBA at supply duct

3. Duct attenuation (40 m run + 6 elbows): -8 dBA

4. Diffuser noise (8 m/s outlet velocity): +5 dBA back-emission (small, ignore)

Receiver level: 78 – 25 – 22 – 8 = ~23 dBA = NC 25 (well under target).

For tighter spaces (NC 25 hotel room), adjust:

  • Lower-velocity ducting (5 m/s vs 7 m/s)
  • Larger silencer (2.0 m)
  • More duct lining

Common acoustic design mistakes

1. No silencer between AHU and supply duct. Direct fan noise transmits to occupied space.

2. Equipment over-velocity in ducts. 11 m/s velocity is fine for flow but generates 50+ dBA hiss audible 30 m away.

3. No vibration isolation. Pump or fan transmits structure-borne; receiver hears low-frequency rumble.

4. Open ceiling plenum without barrier. Breakout noise from mechanical room transfers via plenum.

5. Specifying equipment without dB(A) requirement. Tender silent on acoustics → contractor picks cheapest noisy equipment.

Quick checklist

  • [ ] NC target identified per space type
  • [ ] Equipment dB(A) at source documented
  • [ ] Vibration isolation specified at every equipment-structure interface
  • [ ] Sound attenuators in supply + return at AHU
  • [ ] Duct velocity ≤ 5 m/s in critical areas, ≤ 7 m/s in offices
  • [ ] Plant room acoustic walls/ceiling NRC ≥ 0.85
  • [ ] Plant room walls STC ≥ 40 from occupied
  • [ ] Pre-occupancy noise survey + verification

References: ASHRAE Handbook HVAC Apps 2023 Ch 49 (Sound and Vibration); IS 14861 (Acoustics — Noise from HVAC Equipment); ISO 11820 (Acoustics — Measurement of HVAC Noise); ASHRAE 90.1 acoustic guidance.

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