by DocMartin »
Sat Nov 10, 2018 1:51 am
I am not an expert...
...but - soundproofing relies on (a) mass and (b) absorption to work. Also, there must be no airgaps sound can leak through or other sneak paths. If you haven't got the thickness to put in a proper system it could be tricky.
First off, rather than use standard drywall, there is an acoustic version which should be superior.
As you say, you should use some sort of airgap. I don't think resonance will be a problem as the wavelengths of sound humans can hear are probably all longer than the airgap. To be specific, resonances might occur down to a quarter-wavelength of sound. Probably all the sound you are bothered by is under 1-2kHz and a quarter wavelegth of 2kHz sound is 4cm...Your 'thin' airgap doesn't sound anything like that big. Also, 2kHz is probably on the high side for annoying noises, more like below 1kHz, at a guess.
You are right that fixing drywall (acoustic or otherwise) directly to a wall probably won't be the best solution. It will help a little as it is extra mass, but there is not much extra absorption. Green glue (had to look that up) looks like a noise absorbent (visco-elastic) material but I think an air gap would help too as sound is reflected from interfaces so for instance any that makes it through your wall into the air gap would mostly bounce off the rear of the drywall, then rereflect off the wall etc, some getting through the drywall on each reflection but some going back through the wall. Plus, if the sound in the gap meets up with some kind of damping material as it bounces back and forth, it loses energy every reflection that way too.
I believe you can get resilient mounts for this sort of thing. They take the form of two metal pieces with mounting holes, separated by an absorbant rubber material. They can carry load but there is no direct path from one side to another except going through the rubber, which attenuates sound.
I would think that you have to be careful at the edges of the drywall too, as sound gets through small air gaps and if you grout it to the adjoining walls that constitutes a sound-leak path. You could try taking it just shy of the adjoining walls and injecting the gaps with green glue or neoprene rubber sealant or even polyurethane foam? Actually, never mind the duralay, look up acoustic foam tiles - you could stick them to the back of an acoustic drywall panel and then also use suitably shaped rubber grommets to take drywall screws into battens. Just some ideas - although some of the sound deadening foams look quite expensive per square foot as it were, but they could seal any gap around the edges of the drywall panels too...