Measured: iPhone 16 Pro microphone frequency response and directivity

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Frequency Response

In order to measure the frequency response of the iPhone 16 Pro’s microphone, a lab-grade reference microphone (PCB model 378B02 1/2-inch pre-polarized free-field condenser microphone) was positioned facing the iPhone mic approximately 1mm away from the phone within our anechoic chamber.

iPhone 16 Pro and PCB 378B02 positioned for frequency response measurement in an anechoic chamber.

The speaker was behind the PCB mic, facing the iPhone. Both microphone signals were fed into a 485B39 USB stereo ICP signal conditioner and the response of the iPhone relative to the reference mic was measured using SignalScope’s Dual FFT Analyzer. Then, the iPhone and PCB mic were rotated 180 degrees, keeping the same orientation and position relative to each other, and the response was measured again. The 2 resulting frequency response measurements were averaged. Each averaged measurement was then corrected for the factory-supplied frequency response of the reference microphone for both pressure sensitivity and free-field sensitivity. The results are shown in the following graph, which was created in SignalScope.

iPhone 16 Pro microphone frequency response, corrected with factory-supplied data for the pressure (blue) and free-field (green) response of the PCB 378B02 reference mic.
iPhone 16 Pro microphone frequency response, corrected with factory-supplied data for the pressure (blue) and free-field (green) response of the PCB 378B02 reference mic.

Directivity

The iPhone’s bottom microphone sits to one side of the phone, which means that sound will be better received when the sound is coming from that side, especially at higher frequencies. Higher frequencies have shorter wavelengths and when the sound encounters an obstacle (such as the body of the iPhone) that is larger than the wavelength, less of the sound will reach the other side of that obstacle. The way a microphone receives sound from different directions can be described by its directivity (sometimes referred to as its polar response or polar pattern).

To get a better understanding of the directivity of the iPhone’s microphone, we mounted it inside our anechoic chamber and measured the sound from a loudspeaker pointed at the grill covering the microphone from different angles in 1.5 degree increments. The directional behavior of the iPhone microphone is shown in the polar plots, below, which were created in SignalScope.

iPhone 16 Pro Bottom Microphone Directivity at 1 kHz, 4 kHz, and 16 kHz