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Title:

Qualification of a Reverberation Chamber Equipped With Lightweight Diffusers

Accession Number:

01054168

Record Type:

Component

Availability:

Institute of Noise Control Engineering

Iowa State University, 210 Marston Hall
Ames, IA 50011-2153 United States

Abstract:

This paper describes how reverberation chambers are used for acoustic measurements, such as sound absorption and sound power. A reverberation chamber is intended to provide a diffuse sound environment, where the sound field is sufficiently independent of the position of a source or receiver, i.e. the total energy density is uniform throughout the chamber, and this is achieved by designing a chamber with hard walls, acoustically isolated from outside noise. The design of the chamber dimensions is unequal in separating its eigenmodes, and often, the walls are non-parallel to reduce the severity of standing waves. Almost invariably, reflecting panels are placed in the chamber to further diffuse sound. With panels orientated at random angles, the sound is reflected repeatedly, resulting in directional blending of sound. These reflecting panels, referred to as diffusers, can be made of various materials, but it is recommended that the material be relatively dense, at least 5 kilograms per square meter of surface area. Reverberation chamber qualification is a standardized process that must be conducted and documented in order for a chamber to be used for acoustic measurements according to national standards. ASTM C423 is a standard that details the measurement of a sample’s sound absorption using a reverberation chamber; its appendices direct the configuration and qualification of reverberation chambers. At The Georgia Institute of Technology, there is a new reverberation chamber that must be qualified for sound absorption measurements. This chamber has steel panel construction for its walls and ceiling. The floor is a concrete slab, isolated from the host space by a 3 Hz isolation system. The room dimensions are 8 x 6.3 x 5 m. To promote diffusion within the chamber, stationary fiberglass diffuser panels will be suspended from the ceiling at random positions throughout the volume. These panels are made of 2.1 x 2.1 m sheets of fiberglass, weighing 1.3 kg/m2. These panels are much lighter than those recommended in ASTM C423, but are desirable since they afford easy, safe chamber reconfiguration. The fiberglass is corrugated to promote further randomness of the sound field. The work at hand is intended to determine if such diffusers are suitable to the required task.

Monograph Accession #:

01054353

Language:

English

Corporate Authors:

Institute of Noise Control Engineering

Iowa State University, 210 Marston Hall
Ames, IA 50011-2153 United States

Transportation Research Board

500 Fifth Street, NW
Washington, DC 20001 United States

Authors:

Famighetti, Tina M
Muhlberger, Emily E
Cunefare, Kenneth A

Editors:

Burroughs, Courtney B
Maling, George C

Pagination:

pp 202-208

Publication Date:

2004

Conference:

Noise-Con 04. The 2004 National Conference on Noise Control Engineering

Location: Baltimore Maryland, United States
Date: 2004-7-12 to 2004-7-14
Sponsors: Institute of Noise Control Engineering; Transportation Research Board

Media Type:

CD-ROM

Features:

Figures (7) ; References (5)

Subject Areas:

Energy; Environment; Highways; Research; I15: Environment

Files:

TRIS, TRB

Created Date:

Jul 16 2007 2:30PM