[0001] The present invention relates to a sound-damping, acoustic device of the kind comprising
a sheet-material member which can be set, by sound, into oscillatory motion transversely
to its geometrical extension, and which forms at least a part of the defining walls
of a chamber.
[0002] It is fundamental to sound-damping acoustic devices that they are able to absorb
sound to some extent, thereby correcting the acoustics of a room, and that they are
able to dampen noise and to separate and isolate a sound-source from the surroundings.
[0003] Sound is created by the wave-form motion of a medium, this wave motion propagating
at a velocity which is dependent upon the nature of the medium through which the sound
travels. This medium may be a gas, a liquid, or a solid. In air at normal atmospheric
pressure and a temperature of about 20°C, speed of sound is about 344 ms-1. The speed
is greater, however, when propagating through a solid body with small internal damping,and
decreases when damping is high. Sound energy occurs as a disturbance in the medium,
and causes the particles in the. medium to oscillate about a position of equilibirium.
When the particles oscillate in the same direction as that in which the sound wave
propagates, acoustic energy manifests as a longitudinal wave. In the case of a medium
consisting of air, this is the only propagation which can occur, i.e. the acoustic
energy flows in the medium in the same direction as the wave. In the case of solid
media, complex wave forms may also occur, i.e. the acoustic energy can change direction
and flow perpendicularly to the direction in which the wave propagates. The wavelength
is determined by the smallest distance between mutually adjacent particles in the
medium which have the same direction of motion and phase. Wave frequency is derived
from the relationship between the speed of propagation in the medium, the oscillation
interval, and the number of oscillations per unit of time. The sound is affected by
obstacles located in its path of propagation. The extent to which the sound is affected
is determined by the specific frequency of the sound. If the frequency is low (long
waves) and the surface area presented by the obstacle is small in relation to the
wavelength, then the extent to which the sound is affected is substantially negligible.
If the frequency is high (short waves) and the size of the obstructing surface is
comparable with the wavelength, then propagation of the wave practically ceases and
the sound must change direction. If the obstructing surface is totally reflective
at this frequency, the sound is reversed towards the acoustic source. If the sound
is able to penetrate into the obstructing surface, the obstruction will take-up a
certain amount of the incoming acoustic energy, which is therewith absorbed and transmitted,
while the remainder of the acoustic energy is reflected back to the sound- -.. source.
If there is no obstruction in the propagating path of the sound- wave, then so-called
free sound propagation is obtained.
[0004] Thus, it is partly the extent of proportional obstruction to the soundwave from a
sound-source and partly the quantitive distribution between the frequency-dependent
propagation limitation,absorption, transmission and back- to-source reflection that
determine the quality and the acoustic sound reduction with a given acoustic device,
together with the manner in which said device is arranged in relation to the sound-source
in a given room. By acoustically preventing the sound from radiating from a sound-source,
i.e. by screening, a certain degree of sound reduction may be obtained in the surroundings.
On the other hand, that sound which occurs at the sound-source will only be reduced
to an insignificant extent, or will be acoustically amplified by the presence of the
acoustic screen, when the screen reflects the sound back to source at those frequencies
at which penetration into the screen surface is slight.
[0005] That part of the sound from the sound-source which has not been absorbed by a screen,
in accordance with the above, will travel through the air until it reaches a solid
room-defining wall. If this wall is totally reflective, the sound will be returned
back towards the sound-source and towards the room-defining wall opposing the first
mentioned wall, and also towards other room-defining walls, in relation to the angle
of incidence of the soundwave
- Provided that the surface of the room-defining wall remains fixed when subjected
to the kinetic energy of the soundwave, the speed at which the particles move in the
soundwave approaches zero at a given distance from said surface, and becomes zero
at said surface. If the particle movement in the wave is sinusoidal, the particle
speed is at a maximum at a distance from the defining surface equal to one quarter
of the wavelength. If, on the other hand, the surface is not fixed, i.e. the surface
vibrates as a function of the energy of the incoming soundwave, the surface of said
defining wall will act as an alternatively codirectional and counter- directional
sound-source, and hence the location of the zero-point becomes physically indefinite
and frequency related.
[0006] If the room-defining wall is not acoustically undampened, certain incident acoustic
energy will be absorbed, transmitted and reflected. The absorption properties of the
wall can be greatly increased by covering the surface of said wall with a suitable
sound-absorbing acoustic device. This will prevent the sound from returning back to
the sound-source and towards other room-defining surfaces. When no sound at all is
re-reflected in any direction from a given surface at a given frequency, then 100
% absorption is achieved, i.e. if the physical area of the surface is 1 m
2 then the absorption is also 1 m
2. Thus, a measurement of the mean absorption for a room having a given surface area
can be defined as the relationship between the total room-absorption and said surface
area. In order for 100 % absorption to be obtained in a room at a given frequency,
the whole of the room surface must be covered with an absorbing material, which permits
the entire sound energy to be absorbed at the surface - 100 % absorption at the surface.
In the case of a room which has been acoustically treated so as to obtain 100 % absorption
for a given frequency, the sound is halved with each doubling of the distance from
the sound-source. If the sound-source is cut-off abruptly, then the sound will cease
immediately, i.e. the reverberation time for the room reaches zero, since no reflected
sound-pressure can be built up therein. Analogously, in the case of a room which has
no absorption at all, the time taken for the sound to cease is infinite - the reverberation
time becomes infinite. In practice, the reverberation time becomes longer the larger
the room, and a certain relationship between the total absorption of the room and
its volume should prevail in order to obtain an acoustically acceptable environment.
By measuring the difference between the reverberation time of a room prior to treating
the room acoustically and that obtained subsequent to providing the room with additional
absorption means, it is possible to determine the mean absorption in the room and
to judge whether or not the acoustic environment of the room is satisfactory with
respect to the volume of the room and the use to which the room is put. Optimal acoustic
damping by absorption may be considered to be obtained when the reverberation time
of the room is the same at all frequencies of the sound.
[0007] The fundamental room acoustics is determined by a number of factors. The geometrical
shape of the room and the relationship between the nature of the different room-defining
surfaces with respect to shape, mechanical stability and intrinsic absorption are
of great importance as to how a generated sound spectrum behaves in the room. In principal,
the relationship,between sound arriving directly from the sound-source and sound arriving
from the surfaces of the room is dependent on where the location,from which the sound
is observed,is positioned in the room and in relation to the sound-source. If this
observing location is located in the immediate vicinity of the sound-source in the
direct field - the acoustics of the room can have had no influence, or only a negligible
influence. Consequently, any reduction of noise from the sound-source will be only
slight or none at all. At an increased distance away from the sound-source, the reflected
sound field becomes dominant over the direct field, and hence sound reduction derived
from absorption material placed adjacent or on a defining wall is at a maximum adjacent
said wall. It will be understood from this that it is impossible to reduce noise at
the sound-source to any appreciable extent, by acoustically dampening the walls and
ceiling of a room. The advantage of absorption at a wall surface is that the distance
law becomes effective sooner. Therewith, absorption of sound at a distance from the
sound-source results in the level of sound being halved progressively earlier (i.e.
at a shorter distance from the sound-source) the higher the absorption at the wall.
[0008] The room itself constitutes an acoustic oscillating circuit. When a sudden pressure
change occurs in the room, then the pressure level in the room must change in proportion
thereto. Since an acoustic oscillating circuit has inertia, a certain amount of time
will lapse before the change in pressure level is effected, which takes place in the
form of an acoustic build-up, which proceeds in accordance with the frequency response
of the room, the natural resonance frequencies of the room manifesting in the step
function which is developed when the pressure change applied has reached equilibrium
and when a repeated change in pressure takes place - e.g. when an applied pressure
rise has been maintained for a given length of time and then cut off. This circumstance
means that an acoustic oscillating circuit cannot accommodate a linear and rapid change
in pressure from the constant atmospheric pressure which always prevails. It is possible
to dampen to a certain extent the impulse distortion originating from the acoustic
room circuit, by increasing the sound-absorption of the room.
[0009] With respect to absorption ability, known arrangements or devices for handling acoustics
are most often greatly dependent upon frequency. Consequently, it is seldom possible,
or never possible to achieve in practice fully satisfactory acoustics and damping
of the aforementioned transient sounds. Because of said frequency dependency, the
desired linearity with respect to the reverberation time of the acoustically treated
room cannot be reached. The lower frequency range, below about 250 Hz, remains particularly
insufficiently dampened acoustically. This means that with rooms of increasing size,
the problem of regulating the reverberation time becomes increasingly difficult with
increasingly dominating low-frequency spectrum in an applied noise spectrum. This
is because that the part of the noise spectrum which is not absorbed will be acoustically
amplified by the reflection surfaces of the room. Since when using known absorption
arrangements or devices, absorption normally decreases very rapidly at frequencies
below about 250 Hz, this disadvantage is apparent in just that frequency range which
exhibits very high resonance amplification of sound by reflections in the room at
these room resonances. Most dominating is the acoustic amplification of a noise spectrum
at the main resonance frequency of the room, this frequency becoming lower as the
room becomes larger. Significant acoustic energies are then developed in the room
structure in the form of mechanical oscillatory motion, which further contribute to
an increase in noise level. As will be understood, these resonance phenomena also
influence the building structure in a manner which, in the worst of cases, may result
in material destruction. Consequently, it is important that low-frequency noise can
be reduced as much as possible, primarily in industrial localities which present surfaces
of considerable area and which incorporate large machines, such as presses, punching
machinery, milling machinery and lathes. Pressing and punching operations on large
work pieces give rise to pressure pulses which are very high in energy and which starts-up
the room resonances. Milling and turning operations on large work pieces give rise
to powerful sounds which exhibit complex spectra. Some energy disappears from these
acoustic spectra as a result of absorption, although those components of the spectra
not absorbed are progressively amplified as stationary sound pressures when the frequency
decreases and may become combined with the amplification of the pulse-sounds in a
manner so unfortunate as to cause mechanical failures in the room structure.
[0010] The reaction of people to noise is highly individual. Individuals can be particularly
sensitive to certain combinations of noise frequencies, where some may come directly
from the machines without being especially annoying to the operator but yet become
completely unsufferable to other exposed individuals in the same locality due to the
sound combinations and their phase, which vary along the floor surface of the locality.
The higher frequencies in a noise spectrum - about 1000 to 5000 Hz - are not particularly
high in energy, but can give rise to permanent noise damage, such as impaired hearing
for example. Recent research has made it clear that low-frequency noise disturbances
can be extremely dangerous to human beings and, as beforementioned, to building structures.
[0011] When taking into account the fact that when the noise frequency lies below about
125 Hz, it is impossible to obtain any considerable absorption with the fibrous mineral-wool
absorbents used practically exclusively today, and when comparing this fact with the
fact that the noise which is really high in energy and which is harmful to both human
beings and building structures falls below this limit frequency for a resistive absorption
device, it will be seen that technical search for acceptable absorption components
which are operative so far down in the frequency spectrum as to establish an acoustical
environment at low frequencies is highly desirable. Naturally, experiments with this
end in mind have already been carried out, but costs and engineering problems which
could not be solved satisfactorily have forced the acoustic engineer to neglect the
low-frequency range.
[0012] As an example of complicated constructions, which often are very expensive and physically
bulky, may be mentioned Helmholz absorbents of various designs, which are intended
for special functions in certain frequency ranges. In addition hereto, brief mention
will be made below of the principal function of known oscillatory member, also intended
for use in discrete frequency ranges.
[0013] In its original design, a Helmholz resonator comprises an air volume enclosed in
a chamber provided with an opening to the surroundings. The opening tunes the interior
of the chamber to resonate at a given frequency. This type of absorbent is used to
absorb discrete frequencies, such as the main resonance frequency of the room in question
for example, and has at the Helmholz-resonance, in principle, 100 % efficiency. Since
the frequency in question may, for example, be 25 Hz, which '-.becomes the dominating
resonance frequency in a room and which is the frequency which one wishes to absorb,
the absorbent may become very large in volume. Naturally, a large quantity of air
has a relatively large mass, and hence a significant impulse inertia will occur in
the resonator. Radical changes in pressure in the room, caused by heavy mechanical
machines, such as presses, working therein, will cause the resonator to become activated
and, upon releasing the absorbed motional energy, to emit a powerful tone. If the
absorption chamber is not mechanically stable, the resonator will release its acoustic
energy along several resonance frequencies, and a frequency spectrum of low frequencies
is generated due to the resonator being brought into oscillations by a single pulse.
Thus, increased and annoying noise may be a resulting effect from such absorbents
which, of course, does not lead to the intended result. It is possible to improve
the transient performance of a Helmholtz resonator by properly dampening the interior
of the resonator with porous material, and by also providing the opening to the surroundings
with a suitable acoustic resistance, although this is done at the expense of the acoustic
efficiency of the absorbent.
[0014] Absorption at medium-low frequencies, i.e. frequencies from 125 - 1000 Hz, may be
improved by using a Helmholz resonator absorbent of smaller physical dimensions. This
absorbent has the form of a cavity construction, having a perforated cover-plate mounted
on studs. The device is mounted on a defining wall, and has a high acoustic efficiency
within a given, limited frequency range. Since these devices are often designed for
frequencies where the volume does not become excessive, the acoustic properties with
transient exitation of the resonator construction may, in theory, be considered good.
The cover panels, however, are often too pliable, and hence they will oscillate in
sympathy at frequencies which are lower than the intended frequency range. This means
that the construction, in practice, will not remain neutral to transient sound effects
and disturbing noise may be generated, similar to the case with the large Helmholz
resonator design . Also this cavity resonator may be dampened both internally and
across the perforations. The transient performance and absorption linearity with respect
to the frequency range can thus be improved, although also for this design version
at the expense of the acoustic efficiency.
[0015] Another version of the Helmholz resonator comprises oscillatory panels mounted on
studs. A thin and flexible panel made from imperforate plywood can be combined with
the rearwardly located air chamber, so as to bring the panel into maximum oscillation
at the resonance frequency of this acoustic system. Good absorption at this resonance
frequency and negligible absorption at other frequencies is characteristic of such
an oscillating panel. As a result of the construction principle incorporating a homogenous,
oscillating membrane which oscillates on an air spring, it is possible to obtain a
low resonance frequency with a considerably smaller volume parameter than that which
must be used for cavity resonator constructions. The resistive dampening of the oscillatory
motion, however, is small and approaches zero when the panel oscillats at resonance
frequency. Also, this construction for improved low-frequency absorption suffers the
disadvantage that the poor damping provided results in significant instability for
transient exitation, and significant intrinsic noise must be expected. It is possible
to dampen the-construction internally with fibrous material, although the efficiency
of the construction will then rapidly decrease as dampening increases. Acceptable
transient stability can only be achieved when the panel is dampened purely mechanically
by a rearwardly arranged fibrous material, which by contact action prevents the panel
from oscillating. Obviously, the panel then has ceased to function in the manner intended.
[0016] Fibrous absorbents most frequently have a thickness of 50 - 100 mm and a density
which lies between 40 - 70 kgm
-3. Such absorbents therefore become self-supporting, when made, for example, in sizes
of 1200 x 600 mm. A typical feature of the fibrous mineral-wool absorbent is that
the velocity of sound propagation in the material is roughly halved, i.e. to about
172 ms-1. Absorption can maximally reach 100 %, provided that the material is not
so dense that sound is reflected away from the surface at a certain frequency. The
absorbents function by short-circuiting the acoustic energy received. Absorption can
only take place when the particles carried in the sound wave are transported through
the fibre-material, and when the particle velocity is high in that part of the transportion
path which is contained within the fibre-structure .
[0017] As an example of the absorption characteristics obtainable with a fibre absorbent
having a thickness of 100 mm, when said absorbent is mounted close to a defining wall,
it can be mentioned that its lower absorption limit lies at about 450 Hz. If the absorbent
is moved away from the surface of the wall, and placed at a distance of 1 meter therefrom,
the limit frequency will be about 45 Hz. This calculation has been made with the assumption
that the absorbent material will not oscillate mechanically with the soundwave, and
that a quarter of a wavelength's travel in the material with the velocity of propagation
constant and equal to 172 ms provides a 100 % of absorption. In practice, however,
the material distributed within the absorbent oscillates in sympathy with the soundwave.
This is due to the fact that the material itself constitutes a more dense medium than
the air, and hence specific material sections will be themselves set into wave motion
in both co-direction and counter-direction. This physical fact means that the absorbent
loses its absorption ability progressively with decreasing frequency, since the oscillating
amplitude increases when constant sound pressure prevails and the frequency falls.
The sympathetic oscillations in the material will also cause the surface and body
of the absorbent to radiate acoustic energy in conjunction with the absorbent ceasing
to be at rest. The radiated acoustic soundwave will then come from a mechanical surface
which oscillates in an uncontrolled fashion, and hence the sound obtains the character
of so-called random sounds.
[0018] These malfunctions must therefore be taken into account when considering an acoustic
device comprising fibrous absorbents. These devices function very well in frequency
range where the frequency is high with resulting small oscillation amplitude of the
sound, namely from about 1000 Hz, but lose their absorption ability when the frequency
falls and the oscillation amplitude thereby becomes high. The hidden radiation of
random sounds is already serious enough at medium-low frequencies, since this acoustic
disturbance typically affects the intelligibility at speech frequencies of 125 - 650
Hz, and normal conversion between individuals is impaired in such an environment.
[0019] When the transient response to which the outlined fibrous absorbent gives rise when
subjected to powerful and rapid pressure changes is considered in the same light,
the acoustic error becomes even greater. In this case, each individual absorbent is
caused to oscillate about its natural resonance frequency, which can be very low,
for example as low as 5 - 40 Hz, and hence a significant and highly disturbing low-frequency
situation with generated random noise may occur also in acoustically light environments.
[0020] The object of the present invention is to provide a novel and improved acoustic device
for damping sound, with which the disadvantages encountered with conventional sound
absorbents in accordance with the aforegoing are at least substantially overcome.
[0021] To this end there is proposed in accordance with the invention an acoustic device
of the kind mentioned in the introduction, which is also characterized by the combination
that the member is substantially free-swinging; that the chamber is at least substantially
acoustically closed;and that the device is provided with means for damping displacement
of said member transversely to said geometrical extension in proportion to changes
in the rate of displacement. As a result of the combination of characteristic features
proposed in accordance with the invention the acoustic device obtains a high efficiency
and becomes well impedance-matched to sound-energy received, in a broadened frequency
range, especially extended towards low frequencies. The device also exhibits an improved
dynamic function upon transient exitation of the same, since sound radiation deriving
from natural oscillations of the surfaces of the device is markedly reduced, thereby
optimizing its transient response.
[0022] The sheet-material member may comprise an air permeable or air-tight plate, which
may be planar or curved, and may be rigid, said plate then being resiliently mounted
at its edges, so as to be able to oscillate in the aforedescribed manner in co-action
with the air-filled volume of the chamber located rearwardly of said manner. According
to a particularly preferred embodiment of the invention, the member comprises however,
a relatively thin, substantially planar, porous, fibrous or perforated plate, which
is substantially fixed against oscillatory motion along its edge-defining regions
and which when oscillating coacts with an air spring formed by a rearwardly located
air-filled chamber space, the volume of the air-filled space forming said air spring
being so selected in relation to the density of said member, its mass and its flow
resistance, that the oscillatory motion of said member forms a maximum at the resonance
frequency of the device, said maximum appearing in the region of the centre of said
member and being dampened by the flow resistance. In this way, considerable sound
absorption can be achieved in the member itself, in addition to the impedive sound
absorption (i.e. through surface impedance obtained sound absorption) obtained by
the incorporation of said member in the oscillating circuit of the device.
[0023] In order to obtain certain desired effects, for example to ensure that damping of
the member will take place substantially symmetrically about its centre, said member
may have located substantially symmetrically about its geometric centre at least one
area in which it is more permeable to air than the remainder of said member. In this
respect, said area may be enclosed by a tubular part arranged in the direction of
oscillations of the member, for example so that said area is sharply defined and also
so that said area obtains a volume parameter whose magnitude can be determined readily
and precisely by varying the length of said tube, thereby to achieve a degree of freedom
with respect to the resistive components of said area. This latter arrangement provides
precise reproduceability, and the tube with inherent or supplied resistance can constitute
the sole oscillation-controlling means of the device, which means when inserted in
the centre point of the member constitutes a particularly effective dynamic valve
at the most sensitive point of the oscillating circuit for ventilation of the chamber
to the surroundings. For the purpose of controlling oscillation damping of the member,
the device may alternatively, or in addition, exhibit at least one opening which establishes
a connection between the volume enclosed by the chamber and the volume enclosing said
de- .vice, and which has arranged therein a flow resistance of such magnitude as to
considerably dampen the amplitude of oscillatory motion of said member at the resonance
frequency of the device.
[0024] In accordance with another feature of the invention, the device may include at least
one acoustic opening which establishes a connection between the volume enclosed by
the chamber and the volume enclosing the device, which opening substantially acoustically
loads said member so as to substantially inductively increase the acoustic efficiency
of the device around the resonance frequency of the circuit formed by the opening
and the enclosed volume. Suitably, this opening may also exhibit resistance for resistively
reducing the acoustic coupling between said opening and said member.
[0025] In order to alter the degree of damping in the chamber and to form a flow-resistance
screen therein, the device may advantageously have arranged between said member and
the opposite chamber-defining wall at least one acoustically resistive member, which
may also exhibit significant flow resistance.
[0026] In the device according to the invention, the chamber-defining wall located opposite
said member may comprise a rigid plate, or a wall on which the device is mounted.
A particular advantage is afforded, however, when the chamber-defining wall located
opposite said member comprises a member which is substantially identical to the first-
mentioned member, whereby the efficiency of the device per unit of mounting surface
area can be more than doubled as a result of the coaction of the mutually opposing
members, which are interconnected by the volume of air enclosed therebetween, in the
oscillating circuit formed by said members and said volume of air. This synergistic
effect is particularly emphasized in the frequency range in which the inherent acoustic
absorption of the members used is high. The device according to the invention has
a certain characteristic sensitivity to the angle of incidence of sound and to the
distance to the sound-source. This sensitivity can be amplified at the side of the
device where an oscillatory member is arranged, when the chamber-defining side opposite
said member -has arranged therein a port or opening which is of considerable size
in relation to the area of said member and which incorporates an acoustic resistance
for generating at the mouth of said port a sound pressure which is directed against
the sound pressure arriving from the surroundings.
[0027] The invention will now be described more in detail with reference to a number of
embodiments illustrated in the accompanying drawings, further features and advantages
of the invention being made apparent in conjunction therewith.
[0028]
Figure 1 is a cross-sectional view of a first embodiment of the device according to
the invention.
Figure 2 illustrates a corner part of a device according to the invention.
Figure 3 is a sectional-view of the corner part shown in Figure 2, illustrating an
upper half of the device according to the invention.
Figures 4 and 5 are a sectional view and a plan view respectively of a first modification
of the device illustrated in Figure 1.
Figures 6 and 7 are a sectional view and a plan view respectively of a second modification
of the device illustrated in Figure 1.
Figure 8 is a cross-sectional view of a further embodiment of the device according
to the invention.
Figures 9 and 10 are a cross-sectional view and a side view respectively, in larger
scale, of the upper opening in the device illustrated in Figure 8.
Figures 11 and 12 are a cross-sectional view and a side view respectively, in larger
scale, of the lower opening in the device illustrated in Figure 8.
Figures 13 and 14 are a plan view and a cross-sectional view respectively taken along
the line XIV - XIV, illustrating still another embodiment of the device according to the invention.
Figure 15 is a diagram illustrating the relationship which prevails theoretically
at constant sound pressure level between amplitude level and acceleration level for
sound in a sound frequency spectrum having a geometric mean frequency of 360 Hz.
Figure 16 is a diagram illustrating theoretical function parameters for a device according
to the invention having a system resonance frequency at 50 Hz.
[0029] All identical or substantially identical components illustrated in the drawings have
been identified by the same references.
[0030] Figure 1 illustrates the principle design of a device 10 according to the invention.
The device includes a chassis comprising walls 11, 12, 13, which can be made in two
oarts and which are joined together by means of mechanical sealing means so as to
be airtight. The chassis is suitably constructed from plastic or aluminium sections
having a thickness of 1 - 3 mm and manufactured so as to provide a structure which
is mechanically rigid. Although the sides of the chassis are able to absorb some acoustic
energy, it is the members 14 and 15 which constitute the actual absorption area of
the device 10. These members may be given different forms according to the purposes
for which the device is to be used, and in accordance with the principle of the invention.
Thus, the member 14 may have the form of an oscillatory element which can be caused
to oscillate by sound in a direction transversely to the geometrical extension of
said member, while the member 15 may be given a considerably greater rigidity and
density, in which case the member 14 becomes the predominant absorption surface and
is directed towards the acoustic source, while the member 15 forms a rear wall for
the oscillatory member 14 and is substantially passive from an ocillatory aspect.
A construction of this design may be called a single absorbent and obtains an absorption
characteristic which permits an angular absorption which becomes substantially hemi-spherical
and substantially only active in respect of sound incident on the member 14. This
version of the invention may be used to advantage when the device is to be mounted
directly on a defining wall, or in the case of applications where the absorption effect
is desired to be directed towards a certain sound-source, while simultaneously acoustic
screening of the sound-source towards the surroundings is aimed at. A typical example
of such an application is the building-in and acoustic separation of discrete sound-
sources, for example a noisy machine. The device can then be manufactured with an
oscillatory member 14 and a stationary member 15, with the member 14 being provided
on at least the surface facing the surroundings with a mechanically stabilizing staple
fibre layer applied on a glass-fibre core having a thickness of, for example, 20 -
40 mm and a density of about 20 kgm-
3, and with the member 15 being made substantially heavier and more rigid than member
14, and having a thickness of, for example 20 mm and a density of about 100 kgm .
The resonance frequency of the device 10 can be altered by providing internal damping,
by inserting fibre absorbents on the inside of the member 15 and/or along the sides
11, 12, 13, of the chassis. When the device is in function, the oscillatory member
14 is displaced by an acoustic pressure change, which causes a change in the pressure
in the chamber 16 enclosed by the chassis and members 14, 15. This change in pressure
either causes the internal air to be compressed or decompressed, depending upon the
direction of motion of the member 14. Thus, the condition at which the mechanical
circuit is in balance is disturbed, and hence the differential part of the internal-
pressure change is able to pass, to a certain quantity, through the members 14, 15.
When this takes place, the oscillatory motion is dampened through the additional flow-resistance
friction component, which is determined at all times by the dynamic impact of the
pressure change. If a given change in pressure takes place over a certain period of
time, part of the resultant volume-displacement must pass through members 14 and 15
at a velocity which is determined by the static flow resistance and its dynamic resultant.
When the equilibrium at rest of the acoustic circuit formed by the device 10 is changed
at a slow rate, an approach to the static flow resistance for the circuit as a whole
is obtained. Since the static flow resistance per unit area is much lower for the
oscillatory member 14 than for the passive member 15, when member 14 is displaced
very slowly, namely at a related ratio of about 20:100, the flow resistance at member
15 can be considered to be short-circuited and substantially air-impermeable as long
as air is able to pass through the member 14. If the surfaces of both members were
to be impermeable to air, i.e. the flow resistance is short-circuited through, for
example, a plastic- film coating on said surfaces, there would be no significant difference
in the speed of displacement between members 14 and 15, and consequently neither would
any significant difference in pressure be developed between the outer pick-up surface
on member 14 and the internal volume of the chamber. In addition, it would no longer
be possible to achieve acoustic absorption at very slow pressure changes (low frequencies)
and it would not be possible to take-up the acoustic pressure change and convert it
to:mechanical dissipation work in the device. The- pressure change at the receiving
surface of member 14 would approach zero and the incoming soundwave would be reflected
in the same manner as it would with a normal, fixed defining surface. Because the
flow resistance permits limited equalization of pressure to take place over a given
period of time, and because the fixed member 15 having the higher resistance to flow
passively absorbs the residual pressure change in chamber 16, this residual pressure
change being applied through displacement of the member 14, it is possible, however,
to achieve that a given and resistively dampened positional change occurs at the surface
of member 14, whereupon the amplitude of the incoming pressure wave is taken up by
the member 14 and is transmitted to the air in the chamber, said air transmitting
the energy to the substantially fixed absorption member 15 of high density and great
weight, this latter member converting residual energy to heat. Thus, a significant
amount of absorption can also be obtained at very slow accelerations of the member
14, which means that acoustic sound energy is absorbed right down to zero Hz. When
the rate at which the member 14 accelerates increases and reaches a value at which
the static flow resistance obtains an exponentially increasing dynamic component as
a function of the motional velocity and the volume-displacement, which component exceeds
that extent of the flow which may be permitted linearly along the path constituted
by the thickness of said member, the through-flow progressively decreases and substantially
ceases when the dynamic component approaches infinity. The aforesaid limit values
at member 15 are simultaneously exceeded much earlier, and consequently, in this functional
state, the acoustic oscillating circuit formed by the device 10 may be considered
to be fully closed against flow through the surface. The pick-up and conversion of
the applied acoustic energy is executed as a function of the acoustic impedance prevailing
in the oscillating circuit for each frequency and impulse time, and hence the acoustic
system formed is automatically matched within the entire oscillating range and also
includes a variably effective resistive damping. In this way there is obtained a fast
reacting absorption system exhibiting high impulse damping and high acoustic efficiency
in a functional range mainly enlarged towards low frequencies. Thus, this system constitutes
a matched acoustic absorption impedance to the incoming sound, and will only generate
minor quantities of disturbing acoustic energy, since it is well dampened in its oscillatory
function. Because a wide oscillating area can be selected in relation to the enclosed
volume in a construction according to the invention, low resonance frequencies are
already' achieved with physically relatively small absorption devices. Constructions
having an oscillating area of 0,5 m
2 and an enclosed volume of 100 dm
3 can be given a resonance frequency of about 30 - 50 Hz and may have at this frequency
an effective absorption approaching 100 %. A device of the described design may, for
example, have external measurements of about 1150 x 550 x 200 mm, and hence a significant
insertion effect can be obtained for a prescribed mounting surface, something which
cannot be achieved with known techniques. The resultant acoustic absorption -achieved
by the device 10 is higher than that achieved with the oscillatory member itself,
and can become approximately twice as high in the absorption range lying immediately
above the resonance frequency and up to the upper limit frequency determined by the
surface-character of member 14, normally above 4000 Hz. Tis is due to the fact that
the device 10 behaves as a substantially matched acoustic impedance in the whole of
the frequency range for said device, and hence also the energy component in the sound-wave
comprising non-real (reactive) energy is absorbed by the device 10, instead of being
reflected away from the surface of member 14, as is the case with a traditional fibre
absorbent only capable of absorbing real acoustic energy.
[0031] As an alternative to the device described above, the member 15 of the device illustrated
in Figure 1 may comprise a non-absorbing defining wall, such as an existing defining
surface or wall on the site where the device is to be mounted. In this case, the member
15 should be provided with a suitable fibre absorbent which lies free from the member
14, so as to avoid discrete reflexes from the wall surface and to ensure sufficient
internal damping in the chamber 16, so that low-frequency sound is also absorbed at
the defining wall, in the aforedescribed manner. When the device is mounted directly
onto a wall, a plurality of oscillatory members 14 can be placed in the immediate
vicinity of one another, across an absorption chamber which is common to several such
members.
[0032] The device can also be designed in a so-called differential mode, i.e. with two co-acting
oscillatory members of substantially identical construction. Since the oscillatory
members used will have substantially equal mechanical resonance frequencies and equal
flow resistances, they will between themselves develop a differential effect. In doing
so they will dampen each others' oscillations by addition and subtraction which is
related to their mutually determined oscillatory velocity, amplitude and motional
direction. There is obtained a particularly effective, dynamic damping in addition
to an absorption characteristic which is substantially equivalent to both members.
There is therefore obtained an additional increase in the total absorption obtainable
when using the absorption members 14, 15 individually; this increase may be as much
as two to four times that obtained with individual members 14, 15. When the ratio
of the area of a member 14 to the volume enclosed by chamber 16 is constant, the acoustic
resonance frequency of the differential system is approximately halved in comparison
with an equivalent single system according to the invention. As a result of the greatly
elevated efficiency of the differential system, previously unknown insertion effects
on a prescribed mounting surface are obtained over a very wide frequency range. A
particularly high value of room damping in dB/seconds for transient sound effects
is obtained compared with that obtainable when using known techniques.
[0033] The device according to Figure 1 can also be provided with one or two oscillatory
members 14, 15 suspended at their defining edges in the chassis through an elastic
attachment means. For example, a substantially planar and optionally rigid, fibrous
member having a thickness of about 20 mm may be fixedly positioned in a cellular rubber
frame having a width of about 10 to 50 mm, said frame being attached to the chassis
in an air-tight fashion. An alternative attachment variant which can be used, to advantage,
when mounting a thin and substantially inflexible plastic or sheet-like member may
comprise a thin neoprene rubber frame, which is suitably stretched in the plane of
the member so as to obtain a certain amount of tension between the oscillatory member
and the chassis when said frame is mounted in the extension of the member to the chassis.
The fastening of said edge-suspension means and the extension of said means in said
plane can then be tuned to determine the mechanical resonance frequency of a rigid
member in the device 10. The rubber frame may be chosen to be about 10 - 50 mm in
width and then be about 0.5 - 2 mm in thickness. The mechanical mass of the member
14 or 15 and the lateral tension under which they are fastened in said frame determines
the resonance frequency at which the member will oscillate in piston- like fashion
in the chassis of the device 10. When the volume of air is coupled to the member,
there is obtained as a function thereof an acoustic resonance frequency at which the
oscillatory displacement of the surface of said member is at a maximum.
[0034] When none of the oscillatory members includes flow resistance which connects the
internal volume to the surroundings, the device 10 is provided with one of the other
prescribed means which provide a damping effect upon the oscillation of the members.
When desiring to regulate the damping in the enclosed acoustic chamber 16 to a given
damping effect, or to change and to control the resultant absorption characteristic
or acoustic variations of the absorption device in a series production of equivalent
units, such as to displace the resonance frequency of the device, the sound reduction
figure in a given frequency range etc., absorbing plate members can be inserted between
the main sound-absorbing member 14 and the opposing surface of members 15. It may
be necessary to apply this method in order to obtain a broad absorption range when
using oscillatory members having a low-absorbing inherent damping. The absorption
ability of the oscillatory member 14 in such a design will diminish towards high frequencies,
and hence the inclusion of an absorbing partition wall in chamber 16 will result in
the acoustic energy absorbed being transferred to the surface of the partition wall,
to be absorbed therein. The partition wall may include penetrating openings or slots,
which regulate the flow of air in the interior of the device 10.
[0035] Figure 2 illustrates a suitable design of a chassis comprising aluminium or plastics
sections, and shows a corner part of a device which functions in accordance with the
principle described with reference to Figure 1. Figure 3 is a sectional-view of the
corner part shown in Figure 2, with an inserted fibre member 14 which has bonded thereto
outer layers 18 of, for example staple fibres or plastics film. Figure 3 illustrates
a half of a differential construction having two opposed oscillatory members, or of
a construction having one oscillatory absorption member and one substantially passive
absorption member. The section located around edge 19 at the bottom of Figure 3 can
readily be adapted for mounting the device on a wall, when the wall as such may carry
a suitable passive absorbent, when such is used. As will be seen, the fibre absorbent
14, shown at the top of Figure 3, is fixedly attached to a fork-like absorbent holder
20 arranged in an aluminium or plastics section, and is suitably fixed against motion
and sealed by means of continuous rubber glue string 21 applied at the edge of the
absorbent 14 adjacent the fork-like surfaces of the section. This method of mounting
is essential to avoid edge-oscillations of the absorbent 14; to obtain air-tight sealing;
and to ensure that the absorption member 14 can be excited by sound energy and respond
with an oscillation motion linearly and without unnecessary change of the edge tension
in the plane of the absorption surface and without the generation of mechanical secondary
sound from the section- absorbent-joint. By fixing a fibrous absorption member 14
against the edge of the chassis in the thorough and air- tight manner described, it
is ensured, as far as is possible, that the vibration amplitude in the joint becomes
zero, and hence oscillation energy is caused to act concentratedly in the actual absorbent
and not in the chassis structure. It should also be ensured that the fibrous members
14 are mounted in a relaxed planar condition in the chassis, before being bonded thereto.
The parts 22 located on the wall 11 of the chassis, as seen to the left of Figure
3, comprise fibrous absorbents bonded to said wall, which absorbents reduce internal
reflections in the chamber 16, contribute to absorption damping in said chamber, and
reduce undesired vibrations in the chassis. When absorption members 14 are used as
the absorption surface of the device facing the sound-source, and said members have
good inherent absorption, the chassis may be undampened, since the oscillatory member
14 then constitutes an excellent means for damping resonance phenomena and the formation
of standing waves in the chamber 16. Joining of the corner illustrated in Figure 2
should be effected so as to ensure an air-tight joint and also to ensure that mechanical
displacements in an otherwise stable chassis are avoided. The centre beam 23 in the
chassis section 24, Figure 3, is intended to mechanically stabilize the section against
oscillation. It is essential that the device as a whole is made while taking into
account that the chassis becomes acoustically conductive if it is allowed to vibrate
unduly, in which case very powerful related noise may emanate from the absorbent at
discrete frequencies. For the same reasons, the device should be mounted against a
suspension structure made, for example, of aluminium sections, so as to isolate the
chassis of the device somewhat against vibration effects, by providing, for example,
the supporting section or the mounting edge of the device located against said section
with a thin layer of plastics or rubber material. From an acoustic aspect, the device
should be mounted such that the sound-absorbing surface faces the sound-source and
is perpendicular thereto. Devices of the differential type should be mounted in a
corresponding manner, but with an air gap between the units
"10, such as to allow the sound to act on both members 14, 15. The air gap may then,
for example, be 50 mm in width. The most evenly distributed sound absorption in the
spectrum is generally obtained with a device of the differential type, when each alternate
surface unit is left free, so that only 50 % of the mounting surface is used. The
references 25 and 26 identify respectively binding and stiffening connecting elements
bonded in grooves in the sections.
[0036] Illustrated in Figures 4 and 5 is a dynamically active valve means 27 which is intended
to be incorporated in an oscillatory member 14, or optionally in a substantially passive
member in accordance with the invention. When the valve means 27 is provided with
an acoustic resistance and/or flow resistance, the resistive component, identified
at 28, should be placed in the mouth of the tubular part 29, in a manner such that
the resistance acts in the surface of the member 14 in a direction towards the sound-source.
Further, the valve means 27 should be mounted in the geometric centre point of the
oscillator member 14, since the damping of the member achieved through the valve means
is at a maximum effect and also acts symmetrically. Dimensioning of the valve means
27 is determined by whether any other connection to the surroundings of the acoustical
circuit is used or not and by whether the oscillatory member or each oscillatory member
is completely impermeable or incorporates a flow resistance determined by the density,
thickness and area of said member. The tubular part 29 extends in the direction of
oscillation of the member 14, and hence variations can be obtained in the viscous
flow friction of the device, this friction increasing with the length of the tubular
part 29. Thus, the valve means 27 can be provided with a fully open mouth area, for
example an area of about 5 - 20 cm , and for example may have a volumetric parameter
(50 - 200 cm
3) which is greater by roughly a power of 10, thereby achieving substantially viscous
damping of the oscillatory member-14. To this viscous-damping may be added a purely
resistive and damping- increasing friction-parameter component, by stretching over
said mouth area facing the surroundings a thin, fine-mesh net 30, for example a metal
net having a size of 100 - 400 mesh, or for example a layer of staple-fibre having
a density of 50 g m
-2 , i.e. a thickness of about 0.3 mm. It is essential that the net structure 30 is not
allowed to vibrate. Glass fibre, for example, can be mounted in the actual tube 29,
whereby an additional friction damping is provided. As will be understood, the flow
resistance must not be so great as to cause the valve means 27 to be ineffective.
[0037] Figures 6 and 7 illustrate a dynamically active valve means suitable for use when
a porous, or fibrous, passive member or oscillatory member 14 is used. The member,
for example, may have a density as low as 20 kgm -
3 and may have a thickness of 20 mm, and hence it may be desirable to change its total
flow resistance calculated across the oscillatory surface. This can be done by covering
one surface of said member, preferably that surface which borders onto the chamber
16, with an air-impermeable and thin, resilient material, for example a plastics film
32, or alternatively both surfaces of said member may be covered with said material.
By allowing the central area 31 of the member 14 to be open to flow therethrough,
there can be obtained a function which is similar to that obtained with the device
illustrated in Figures 4 and 5, whereby a concentration of the flow resistive properties
of the fibrous, oscillatory member 14 used is made and caused to exert damping action
in the centre of said member. The opening 31 arranged in the layer or covering 32,
which has the form, for example of a plastics film, can be made somewhat larger than
the area used for the device illustrated in Figures 4 and 5, for 2 example 50 - 100
cm .
[0038] The cross-sectional view in Figure 7 of a vibratory member 14 made of a fibrous material
includes, as illustrated, two thin surface coatings 18, 32. These coatings may have
the form of homogenous films or of relatively dense fibrous structures, for example
staple fibre structures, and are effective to stiffen a fibre core 33 when said core
has a low density and poor inherent stability in the plane. The surface layers 18,
32 are effective to dampen oscillation of the core 33, thereby ensuring that break-ups
in the surfaces of the vibratory member 14 into random oscillations are reduced. By
selecting a surface layer 18 of, for example, staple fibre bonded to the core 33,
high-frequency absorption is also improved. This is because the staple-fibre layer
18 can be mechanically disengaged from the core 33 when the wavelength of the incident
sound approaches the thickness of the layer 18. When the core 33 has a thickness of
20 mm and the staple-fibre layer 18 has a thickness of 0.3 mm, the following maximum
possibel oscillation absorption as a function of the wavelength of the frequency is
obtained. Theoretically 9 kHz for the core 33 and 575 kHz for the layer 18, which
values are valid for zero-mass on the layer 18 and core 33, respectively, and the
velocity of propagation in the material calculated to be half the speed of sound in
air. The reaction time of this theoretical circuit is 0.12 ms and 1,75
/us, respectively. When the mass is known, it is possible to determine the reaction
time obtained in practice, this reaction time becoming longer as the mass increases.
Absorption can be considered to take place as a function of the inertia of the mass
in the surface attacked by the sound- wave. If the magnitude of this inertia is not
sufficiently great to prevent the surface incorporating the mass from linearly following
the acceleration a caused by sound pressure p
a(Nm
2) for the mass-M of the surface according to the formula a = P a .S/M, where S is
the surface on which the acoustic pressure acts, then absorption is effected. If the
mass is greater, absorption diminishes. Since the absorption surface of the oscillatory
member 14 according to the invention is assumed to be optimally acoustically loaded
as a function of the air spring formed by the volume of chamber 16, it follows that
the mass inertia of the mechanical circuit will be smaller in the acoustically excited
oscillation than it would have been if no air-spring was present. Because the acoustic
circuit also includes dynamic flow resistance and static flow resistance, there is
obtained a further dynamically effective change of the mass in the oscillatory member
14, and hence a significant linearization of the oscillatory motion is obtained as
a function of the dynamic damping of the member. The dynamic damping is directly applied
mechanically to the oscillatory member 14 when said member has through-flow resistance,
or acts indirectly on the oscillatory member due to the fact that the acoustic circuit
is provided with communication to the surroundings, this communication being so formed
as to enable viscous, resistive change of the pressure difference between the surroundings
and the air chamber 16 to take place. Acoustic pulses, i.e. rapid pressure changes
of short duration, affect the oscillatory member 14 in a manner to displace the same,
thereby to change the level of pressure in the interior of the device. This displacement
motion is dampened by the arrangements according to the invention, such that both
the starting and stopping time for the displaced oscillating mass become changed,
which mass is started up and braked more rapidly when later the changing force has
ceased to act on the oscillatory member. The absorption ability of the device according
to the invention is then also favourably affected both with respect to stationary
and transient acoustic sound energy. Since the dynamic damping afforded by the device
is related both to the velocity of displacement changes and to the amplitude of the
displacement, the damping value is automatically adjusted in the acoustic circuit
so as to constantly approach an optimal value - i.e. a valve which approaches critical
damping. The damping effect reaches maximum at the acoustic resonance frequency of
the device, this resonance frequency being obtained as a function of the resonance
frequency and area of the mechanical circuit and the volume parameter used, and also
the degree of resistive.damping applied. If the mechanical part 14, 15 of the oscillating
circuit is fully damped out by contact material which short-circuits the oscillations
of member 14, then the acoustic circuit ceases to function as a resonance circuit,
and hence the acoustic absorption diminishes in value towards lover frequencies. It
is therefore important that the mechanical oscillating circuit has the form of a substantially
free-swinging circuit and that there is only used an extremely light and compliant
fibrous material when it is necessary to apply a contact-damping material directly
onto the oscillatory member of the device in order to achieve dynamic stability. If
fibrous oscillatory members which are open to through-flow are selected, it is important
to ensure that the flow resistance is sufficiently high. In this way, the device is
given a marked acoustic resonance frequency, where the oscillation amplitude becomes
maximum at a constant applied exitation force - i.e. the acoustic impedance of the
device becomes minimal. If the flow resistance is insufficient, the circuit will cease
to function correctly and the acoustic efficiency will diminish towards the lower
frequencies.
[0039] Figure 8 illustrates a variant 10a of the principle design illustrated in Figure
1, in which slots or gaps illustrated in Figures 9 and 10 and/or Figures 11 and 12
can be used to change the damping conditions and total flow resistance of the device,
particularly when the arrangements illustrated in Figures 4 and 5 or Figures 6 and
7 are not used, or when the oscillatory member or members 14, 15 comprises or comprise
means having no flow communication with the surroundings.
[0040] Figures 9 and 10 illustrate a port or slot 34 which is operative in connecting the
interior of the chamber 16 with the surroundings, where the illustrated flow resistance
35 can be so small as to enable the area of the slot to act substantially inductively
loading on the surface of the oscillatory members 14, 15, since the slot area acoustically
opens the inner chamber 16 to a small and controlled extent, whereby substantially
viscous oscillation damping can be achieved to prevent the pressure function of the
chamber from becoming short-circuited hy the area of the slot 34 to an extent of such
magnitude that the device 10a ceases to be substantially acoustically closed in the
frequency range in which said device 10a is intended to function. Significant viscous
oscillation damping can be obtained by extending the area of the opening 34 in the
flow direction, thereby to form an air tunnel, and by giving the slot 34 an oblong
rectangular shape, preferably having a short to long side ratio of one to eight or
more. The substantially open slot 34 forms, without the addition of a mechanical flow
resistance in the mouth or in the tunnel, a typical Helmholz resonator port in the
chassis, whose working frequency should be adapted to the resonance frequency of the
member 14 in free air, and which can be calculated by the formula

where f is the resonance frequency of the port in volume V
b, which is the volume of chamber 16, c is the speed of sound in air, 344.8 ms
-1, V
p is the volume of the port (the tunnel) and t
p is the tunnel length of the port. When all the magnitudes are expressed in dm and
the area of the port is 0.2 x 1.6 = 0.32 dm
2, and the thickness of the chassis is 0.01 dm, the resonance frequency fp with V
b = 100 dm
3 becomes about 42 Hz, which value approximately constitutes the lower absorption limit
frequency of the device 10a instead of null Hz, which would theoretically constitute
the limit frequency for absorption if the construction was fully acoustically closed,
i.e. had no port or slot 34. If a tunnel having a length of 1 dm is connected to the
port, there is obtained a resonance frequency of about 25 Hz. By incorporating a port
of the aforedescribed kind, it is possible to influence the dynamic properties of
the acoustic system and to change the damping in the system. When such a port is incorporated
the step function of the oscillatory members is generally more rapid, although it
is possible that when the acoustic energy applied ceases, uncontrolled oscillations
may occur as a result of impaired damping of the oscillatory motion, particularly
if the port is large and therewith the port resonance high in frequency. It is therefore
suitable to connect a tunnel to the port and to keep the resonance frequency f
p of the port low, such as to lie below or at least not much above the natural resonance
frequency of the oscillatory member 14. If it is desired to accentuate the increase
in efficiency at the resonance frequency of port 34, which can be achieved in the
aforedescribed manner by incorporating a resonator port in the chassis, and for a
given frequency range, then the area of the port 34 can be made greater and a resistive
friction damping of the acoustic Q-value for the device 10a obtained at the resonance
frequency of the port is obtained by incorporating a further slot-like or port- like
opening 36 in accordance with Figures 11 and 12 (this opening being shown schematically
in the lower part of Figure 8). As will be seen, the port 36 is provided with an acoustic
flow resistance 37 which completely covers the port opening and therewith shortcircuits
its resonance effect with the chamber volume V
b to an extent determined by the flow resistance 37 across the area of the port 36.
This arrangement thus co-acts with the open acoustic port 34, in a manner such that
the tuning steepness for port 34 according to Figures 9 and 10 is reduced by the presence
of the resistive port 36 according to Figures 11 and 12.
[0041] The port illustrated in Figures 11 and 12 can be used to advantage as a pressure
equilizing valve for the acoustic chamber 16 in a device according to the invention
in which no flow resistance is provided for the oscillatory member 14, 15 and which
is not ventilated in any other manner.
[0042] Figures 13 and 14 are a horizontal projection and a vertical sectional view respectively
of a device 10b according to the invention provided with an acoustic port 38 which
is resistively
'snatched to the chamber 16 and the oscillatory member 14 directed towards the sound-source,
which member can be provided in the manner illustrated with a dynamic damping arrangement
27, substantially in accordance with that illustrated in Figures 4 and 5. The port
38 is carried by a defining wall 15 opposing the oscillatory member 14. The wall 15
should be substantially passive to oscillations, have a relatively high density, and
may be acoustically absorbing. The purpose of the port 38 is to influence the sound-absorbing
characteristic of the device 10b in such a manner that said characteristic mainly
occurs for sound acting on the oscillatory member 14 only and absorption takes place
with an angular characteristic which substantially approaches cardioid-shape. Consequently,
as a result of this arrangement, absorption at incident angles which are large in
relation to the direction of oscillation of the member 14 is greatly improved, and
the oscillatory member 14 obtains good resistive damping properties, since the angle-controlling
port 38 opposes sound radiation therefrom, through its acoustic positioning and as
a result of the presence of the acoustic resistance 39 in the mouth of the port facing
the surroundings. In this respect, the port 38 should be given such a large area that
the resonance frequency of the port with the volume in chamber 16 substantially exceeds
the acoustic resonance frequency which the same device would have had in the absence
of port 38. When applying the formula recited with reference to Figures 9 and 10 and
using a chamber volume V
b of about 100 dm
3, there is obtained with a port area of about 2.5 dm 2 a port resonance frequency
of about 70 Hz, the area of port 38 being about half the total original area of the
member 15. The acoustic resistance in port 38 should act in the mouth of said port
and should be so adjusted that the resonance frequency of the device 10b with the
port 38 exhibiting resistance 39 is restored to approximately the resonance frequency
of an equivalent device which lacks the arrangement 38, 39. In this variant it can
be of particular interest to ensure effective, dynamically active oscillation damping
of the oscillatory member 14, by providing said member, as illustrated in Figures
13 and 14, with a dynamic flow valve 27 and optionally also arrange a wall 40, which
may be absorbent and acoustically resistive and which is suitably provided with a
slot 41 or with perforations to allow air to flow continuously through wall 40, said
wall being positioned symmetrically in the centre part of the device 10b.
[0043] Figure 15 is a diagram of a frequency spectrum having a 50 dB of dynamic-range and
with the lower limit frequency set to 20 Hz. It is presumed in the diagram that the
sound pressure level is constant when the frequency varies. In this way there is obtained
the illustrated relationship between the amplitude A of the soundwave (full line)
and its acceleration level a (broken line), where the slope of respective functions
constitute 6 dB/octave. The geometric mean frequency of the spectrum is obtained at
the point where the functions intersect, i.e. at 360 Hz. It is seen that the acceleration
level moves towards zero when the amplitude level moves towards infinity, and that
the amplitude is greater than the acceleration of the soundwave in the frequency range
where frequency decreases from 360 Hz, and that the acceleration is greater than the
amplitude in the frequency range where the frequency increases from 360 Hz. If a frequency
spectrum having a higher limit frequency than 20 Hz is considered, the mean-frequency
point will lie at an even higher frequency. In the frequency range where amplitude
dominates, the oscillation amplitude of an absorbing surface must also increase with
6 dB/octave when the frequency decreases - i.e. is doubled with each halving of the
frequency - in order for absorption at the surface to be constant. It follows from
this that it must be possible for the linear vibration amplitude at the absorption
surface to be progressively greater the lower the limit frequency (resonance frequency)
for which the device is constructed. For example, if the lower limit frequency is
set to 40 Hz, the mechanical resonance frequency of the oscillatory member in free
air must then lie somewhat lower in frequency, e.g. at 20 Hz, in order for the spring
force represented by the volume parameter of the device to be able to increase the
mechanical resonance frequency in relation to the mechanical compliance of the oscillatory
member and the spring stiffness of the air, and so that the resultant acoustic resonance
frequency lies at 40 Hz. Mathematically this can be expressed approximately as f =
f
mech. √s + 1, where f is the acoustical re- a a sonance frequency, f
mech. the mechanical resonance frequency and s is the compliance ratio related to volume
parameter V
b. The compliance ratio s can be calculated from the equation s =
= (f
a/f
mech.)
2 - 1 and the resultant damping at resonance a mech. frequency can be taken from the
relationships η = Q and
Q = f res. /(f
u f where f
u is the frequency which is higher than the resonance frequency f
res and has a 3 dB lower amplitude, and f
1 is the frequency which is lower than the resonance frequency with a 3 dB lower amplitude.
When Q reaches 1.0 an acoustically closed circuit (resonance frequency substantially
determined by a pressure function) is optimally dampened, this value being difficult
to achieve in practice.
[0044] Figure 16 illustrates theoretically different functions for an acoustically absorbing
system in accordance with the invention. At the top of the Figure there is shown the
totally obtained acoustic absorption (full line); to the left is shown by a broken
line the oscillation function α
vibr.; and to the right is shown by a chain line the resistive absorption function α
fric. of a mineral fibre absorbent 14 used in the device 10 and having, for example, a
staple fibre surface layer and a core having a thickness of about 20 mm and a density
of about 20 kgm
-3.
[0045] When the area of the absorbent 14 is selected at about 0.5 m
2 and the volume of chamber 16 is selected at about 50 dm
3, the resonance frequency f a of the absorbent and said volume may lie at about 50
Hz as illustrated in the Figure. The absorption function of the member 14 can be considered
to be represented by a range of 100 % absorption which extends from about 1000 Hz,
f
fr, to about 4000 Hz, f
fc, when the absorbent is measured without an air gap in a conventional manner in a
reverberation chamber. As will be seen, there is obtained individually in the device
an oscillation circuit and a resistive circuit, the effects of which are combined
in a frequency range which extends from 50 Hz to 1 kHz, where both the functions are
decreasing. According to the theoretical model illustrated in Figure 16, the following
is applicable. In the frequency range which lies beneath the resonance frequency 50
Hz, the absorption will decrease by about 12 dB/octave. In the first octave above
the resonance frequency, the absorption will increase by about 3 dB, to be constant
in a perfect system up to 4 kHz, where it again decreases. The inductive absorption
for the system may reach to maximally 100 % and lies at the resonance frequency 50
Hz. Neither can the resistive absorption ever be greater than 100 %, as is the case
between 1000 Hz.and 4000 Hz. The absorption device according to the invention, however,
constitutes a substantially matched acoustic impedance, and hence resultant absorption
of acoustic energy must always exceed the absorption which resistively prevails for
the used oscillatory member 14 alone, and in the outlined case is greater than 100
% for frequencies which lie between 50 Hz (resonance frequency for the system) and
the resistive cut-off frequency 4 kHz, which is marked as a section of 3 dB increased
level at the top of Figure 16, and which, in practice, may reach to about twice the
absorption applicable to the oscillatory member 14 itself.
[0046] When a differential design of the acoustic device according to the invention is chosen,
the oscillatory surface is doubled and the resultant absorption can increase by about
2 - 4 times the oscillatory surface used, as a result of acoustic coupling between
the mutually opposing members 14, 15. In addition, the acoustic resonance frequency
is approximately halved at the same volume parameter as that for a single design,
due to the fact that one of the masses (member 14) loads the other of said masses
(member 15) through the coupling effected via the air located in chamber 16.
[0047] In order to obtain the best use of the invention when constructing the device according
to said invention, it should be ensured that good linearity is obtained in the sensitive
area at and above the resonance frequency f , a where the co-acting functions α
vibr. and α
fric. are both in the decreasing mode.
[0048] There are obtained by means of the invention highly effective sound-absorbing devices
having a very wide absorption range. The described construction principles provide
a wide variation in frequency range, absorption direction, corrections for angular
incident sound energy and extremely good amplitude linearity, this last mentioned
having very great significance in order to avoid undesirable secondary effects such
as, for example, geneiating distortion components, random sound and troublesome acoustic
reflexes. The devices according to the invention have an extremely fast pulse- response
and offer but slight obstruction to propagation of the soundwave adjacent their oscillatory
members, whereby direct reflections are efficiently suppressed and the acoustical
damping effect becomes extremely high, particularly with respect to transient sound.
The described so-called differential systems are particularly suitable for use in
general regulation of roan-acoustics and for noise damping in a very wide frequency
range even with a high content of powerful transient noise in the low frequency range,
since the differential systems absorb from both sides and exhibit particularly high
acoustical damping effect. Furthermore, a particularly advantageous characteristic
of the invention is its good reproducability, the possibility to use modular formats,
and an insertion effect which is substantially additive and enables much higher total
damping in a given room and in a much wider frequency range than that which can be
achieved with conventional absorption constructions.