This part of ISO 10534 specifies a method for the determination of the sound absorption coefficient,reflection factor and surface impedance or surface admittance of materials and objects. The values aredetermined for normal sound incidence by evaluation of the standing wave pattern of a plane wave in atube, which is generated by the superposition of an incident sinusoidal plane wave with the plane wavereflected from the test object.This method can be used for the determination of the sound absorption coefficient of sound absorbers fornormal sound incidence. It can further be used for the determination of the acoustical surface impedance orsurface admittance of sound-absorbing materials. It is well suited for parameter studies and for the designof sound absorbers, because only small samples of the absorber material are needed.There are some characteristic differences between this method and the measurement of soundabsorption in a reverberation room (see ISO 354).The impedance tube method can be used for the determination of the reflection factor and also theimpedance or admittance. The sound is incident normally on the object surface. The reverberationroom method will (under idealized conditions) determine the sound absorption coefficient forrandom sound incidence. The impedance tube method relies on the existence of a plane incident sound wave and gives exactvalues under this condition (measuring and mounting errors excluded). The evaluation of the soundabsorption coefficient in a reverberation room is based on a number of simplifying and approximateassumptions concerning the sound field and the size of the absorber. Sound absorption coefficients exceeding the value 1 are therefore sometimes obtained.The impedance tube method requires samples of the test object which are the size of the cross-sectional area of the impedance tube. The reverberation room method requires test objects which are rather large and can also be applied to test objects with pronounced structures in the lateral and/or normal directions. Measurements with such objects in the impedance tube must be interpreted with care (see 9.1).For the computational transformation of the test results from the impedance tube method (normal incidence) to the situation of diffuse sound incidence, see annex D.This part of ISO 10534 gives preference to numerical methods of evaluation instead of graphical methods, because computers which can perform these computations are assumed to be available. Some of the quantities in the formulae are complex. The arguments of trigonometric functions are in radians.