> (1.1 x speaker diameter)cubed
For non-optimized closed boxes.
Although, an open box tends to have to be no smaller than a closed box, and generally bigger.
In raw theory, the main variable in an open baffle is the distance from front of cone to back of cone. When this is a half-wavelength, output cancels. So for best bass, make the baffle very-very-very big. All else is some compromise.
In practice, you need to "fold the edges" to reduce height and width, make it self-standing, and to hide/protect the magnet. Again there is no good simple theory, except that in practice for the -same- lowest frequency, an open bent-edge baffle tends to occupy a larger volume than a closed box. (The trade-off is that open-back doubles the midbass power efficiency into the room.)
> the back 'baffle' surface area varies...
Yes, and this gets into a grey-zone between open baffle and tuned port. AFAICT, there is little joy and less (simple) theory in this area. A large opening resonates up in the midbass and should cancel deep bass. A small opening (smaller than the cone area) can whiffle at high output. Put rails on the sides, cut a set of 8", 4", 2", 1" cross-boards, and try full-open, half-open, etc to closed. If you find that an 8, a 2, and a 1 give you "the sound", cut an 11" board for final use.