Anechoic tiles are rubber or synthetic polymer tiles containing thousands of tiny voids, applied to the outer hulls of military ships and submarines, as well as anechoic chambers. Their function is twofold:
The technology of anechoic tiles was developed by the Kriegsmarine in the Second World War. Codenamed Alberich after the invisible sorcerer from Germanic Mythology. The coating was made up of sheets approximately 1 m (3 ft 3 in) square and 4 mm (0.16 in) thick, with rows of holes in two sizes, 4 mm (0.16 in) and 2 mm (0.079 in) in diameter.[1][2][3] It was manufactured by IG Farben from a material known as Oppanol.[1][2] The material was not homogeneous but contained air cavities; it was these cavities that degraded the reflection of ASDIC.[4] The coating worked in the 10 to 18 kHz range, reducing ASDIC to 15% of its normal strength.[1] This frequency range matched the operating range of the early ASDIC active sonar used by the Allies. The ASDIC types 123, 123A, 144 and 145 all operated in the 14 to 22 kHz range.[5][6] However, this degradation in echo reflection was not uniform at all diving depths due to the voids being compressed by the water pressure.[7] An additional benefit of the coating was it acted as a sound dampener, containing the U-boat’s own engine noises.[1]
The coating had it first sea trials in 1940, on U-11, a Type IIB.[4][1] U-67, a Type IX, was the first operational U-boat with this coating.[2] After her first war patrol, she put in at Wilhelmshaven probably sometime in April 1941 where she was given the coating, it covered the conning tower and sides of the U-boat, but not to the deck. By 15 May 1941, U-67 was in Kiel performing tests in the Baltic Sea. During July, the coating was removed from all parts of the boat except the conning tower and bow. Further experiments and sound trials were made in the Little Belt but they presumably proved unsatisfactory, as all the coating was subsequently removed.[8] Problems were encountered early-on, when the adhesive was found to be not strong enough to stick the synthetic rubber sheets to the pressure hull and casing of the U-boat.[4][3] This resulted in the sheets loosening and creating turbulence in the water, making it easier for the submarine to be detected.[9] Furthermore, the coating was found to have considerably decreased the speed of the boat.[2][10]
It was not until late 1944 that the problems with the adhesive were mostly resolved. The coating required a special adhesive and careful application; it took several thousand hours of glueing and riveting on the U-boat.[11] The first U-boat to test the new adhesive was U-480 a Type VIIC.[4][1] With good results with the new adhesive, the Oberkommando der Marine intended that it would be widely used on the new Type XXI and Type XXII U-boats. However, the war ended before it could be put into large scale use.[4] Ultimately only one operational Type XXIII, U-4709, was coated with the anechoic tiles.[1] U-boats with the anechoic tiles coating include: U-11, U-480, U-485 U-486, U-1105, U-1106, U-1107, U-1304, U-1306, U-1308, U-4704, U-4708 and U-4709.[12][13][14]
After the war the technology was not utilized again until the 1970s when the Soviet Union began coating its submarines in rubber tiles. These were initially prone to falling off, but as the technology matured it was apparent that the tiles were having a dramatic effect in reducing the submarines' acoustic signatures. Modern Russian tiles are about 100 mm thick, and apparently reduced the acoustic signature of Akula-class submarines by between 10 and 20 decibels, (ie 10% to 1% of its original strength).
The modern materials consist of a number of layers and many different sized voids, each targeted at a specific sound frequency range at different depths. Different materials are sometimes used in different areas of the submarine to better absorb specific frequencies associated with machinery at that location inside the hull.
The Royal Navy started using anechoic tiles in 1980, when HMS Churchill was fitted with them during her second refit.[15]
The US Navy started using anechoic tiles in the mid 1980s, with the improved 688-class submarine USS San Juan being the first boat to receive them.[16] Nearly all modern submarines are now designed with them.