Modulation
- Updated2025-12-21
- 2 minute(s) read
Modulation is a measure of the uniformity of reflectance of the dark and light modules in a 2D barcode. Lower modulation may increase the probability of a module being incorrectly identified as dark or light.
Modulation is affected by print growth or loss, defects, reflectance, and variation of the ink coverage. For example, the following figure illustrates a Data Matrix with variations in reflectance:

Modulation is expressed as:
Modulation = 2 · (abs(R - GT))/SC
where,
R is the reflectance of the module closest to the global threshold in the codeword,
GT is the global threshold.
The mean reflectance of the darkest 10% and the mean reflectance of the lightest 10% is determined. The average of the two means is taken as the global threshold.
The modulation grade for a codeword is computed as the minimum grade of all the data cells in a particular codeword. The final modulation grade is determined by comparing the number of codewords with a particular grade or higher and the error correction capacity of the given data matrix barcode. The following list shows how codeword grading for modulation is calculated.
- A (4.0) if modulation ≥ 0.50
- B (3.0) if modulation ≥ 0.40
- C (2.0) if modulation ≥ 0.30
- D (1.0) if modulation ≥ 0.20
- F (0.0) if modulation < 0.20
The following figure shows a Data Matrix code with a modulation grade of F.
