In the low frequencies, the measured values per unit increased VERY systematically, as baffels were more and more positioned to the room boundaries
Andrew Steel wrote:Eric,
You are right, it has sparked interest in the lab and they want to investigate further now. I will have to pay for it though :-)
Bob wrote:In "Acoustic Absorbers and Diffusers" by Trevor Cox and Peter D'Antonio it says on page 13 paragraph 2
"In practice, many people place porous absorbtion in corners of rooms thinking this will absorb the modes since all modes have a 'contribution' in the corners. However, while the modes have a maximum pressure in the corners, the particle velocity is very low and so the absorption is ineffective."
This brings me to the question, does anyone know if the higher density stuff would be more effective below 100Hz, or would the 701 still have the lead all the way to the bottom?
Another question, how much more effective would a 4"+2" panel be over a single 4"? 6" over 4" total. This also considering there will be an air gap behind it, around a foot to the corner, maybe more.
Bob, is this quote the only thing the book mentions about corner absorption, or is that a selected sentence? What I mean is: does the book tell something more which can put your quote in a broader or more specific context?
Particularly prominent modes are usually treated with bass absorption, often referred to as bass traps or bins. (It is not usually possible to treat this problem with diffusion because the sizes of the diffusers become prohibitively large.) Porous absorbers are not usually used, as they would have to be extremely thick to provide significant bass absorbtion. Porous absorbtion is most effective when it is placed at a distance from a room boundary where the particle velocity is maximum. This is at the quarter wavelength position. For a 100hz tone this would be roughly 1m from the boundary. Placing porous absorbers directly on a room boundary, while the most practical, is not efficient because the particle velocity at a boundary is zero. In practice, many people place porous absorbtion in corners of rooms thinking this will absorb the modes because all modes have a 'contribution' in the corners. However while the modes have a maximum pressure in the corners, the particle velocity is very low and so the absorption is ineffective. For these reasons, resonant absorbers are preferred for low frequency modal treatments.
... the design of modern critical listening rooms is heavily dependant on how one controls strong specular reflections between the sources and the listeners. The diffusers in RFZ spaces provided massive surround sound enhancing envelopment. Today, with surround sound reproduction formats such as 5.1 finding acceptance, the concepts are still valid but are employed differently. The rooms are not polarized between live and dead zones, but tend to be more uniform, with diffusers being used to enhance the envelopment and immersion of the surround speakers and to provide the desired degree of ambience. Absorbers and diffusers can still control strong specular reflections, which cause spectral and spatial distortion. One approach to designing a surround critical listening room, suggested by D'Antonio, utilizes broadband absorbtion down to the modal frequencies in the corners (using a combination of membrane and porous absorption). Absorbers or hybrid surfaces of 50-100mm deep are used on the walls between speakers and listener, to control first-order reflections, and diffusers are used in the middle of the four walls to enhance envelopment. Diffusing clouds, with broad bandwidth absoption down to the modal frequencies placed above the listeners, provide surround reflections and additional modal control.
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