Thursday, December 19, 2019

New Technology for Noise Control

New Technology for Noise Control New Technology for Noise Control Dr. Rick Scholte, founder of Sorama, Eindhoven, The Netherlands, was out to make some noiseby ridding machines of it. A researcher in the mechanical engineering department at the Eindhoven University of Technology, hes devoted years to analyzing the sound of products, culminating with the creation of the sound camera. It started with visualizing sound and vibrations and the first version had only two microphones, one was acting as a reference center and the other was a robotic system that could scan the microphone, he says. The measurements just werent enough to make a difference.The time taken was too long based on the number of images or scans we were getting, he remembers. It was clear we needed many more microphones but the channel price was very high. It would be a few million dollars for that saatkorn level microphone. We started using the ones for hearing aids with analog and MEMS microphones that are used in ph ones. Now it was a price that was much better.Issues with noise and sound are often overlooked in the whole design process and its usually only a few weeks before the product goes into production that inventors realize the problem, Scholte says. But it goes beyond annoyance. There was research reported by the HWO about noise pollution that found one million healthy life years were lost because of traffic noise pollution, he says. It can even cause heart disease. Its the number two health risk in Europe and may be number one by 2020.Explaining how the sound camera is put into action he compared it to those used to assess energy leaks in houses. Were trying to find where the weakness is, he says. The successful version of the camera pointed 1,024 microphones at the product and visualized and measured the sound pressure. It pinpointed where the source of the noise is located and how it behaves over time, he says.An example of the cameras success was with a heating system by Remeha. It contained a beeping which Scholte says was one of the loudest for that market. Originally, the company spentsix to sevenmonths with their gruppe doing trial and error and werent able to change much. We came in and, with the camera, we analyzed images and saw aroundfour to fivedifferent sources causing the noise, one of them in the boiling system. We managed to get the noise level down more than 80 percent intwo to threedays and it became one of the quietest on the market.Another example was solving a beeping noise in a mobile phone, to the tune of 13 khz in your ear. There it was just one problem to be adjusted and the beeping was gone, he says. Sometimes the answer can be very simple but you have to find the source of the issue.Scholtes goal is to improve the health of the consumer and also change the mindset of products. Sound is the last thing they think of when they create something. It should always be one of the first things.Eric Butterman is an independent writer.Sound is the last thing they think of when they create something. It should always be one of the first things.Dr. Rick Scholte, founder, Sorama

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