Broadband transmission noise reduction of smart panels featuring piezoelectric shunt circuits and sound-absorbing material.

The possibility of a broadband noise reduction of piezoelectric smart panels is experimentally studied. A piezoelectric smart panel is basically a plate structure on which piezoelectric patches with electrical shunt circuits are mounted and sound-absorbing material is bonded on the surface of the structure. Sound-absorbing material can absorb the sound transmitted at the midfrequency region effectively while the use of piezoelectric shunt damping can reduce the transmission at resonance frequencies of the panel structure. To be able to reduce the sound transmission at low panel resonance frequencies, piezoelectric damping using the measured electrical impedance model is adopted. A resonant shunt circuit for piezoelectric shunt damping is composed of resistor and inductor in series, and they are determined by maximizing the dissipated energy through the circuit. The transmitted noise-reduction performance of smart panels is tested in an acoustic tunnel. The tunnel is a square cross-sectional tube and a loudspeaker is mounted at one side of the tube as a sound source. Panels are mounted in the middle of the tunnel and the transmitted sound pressure across panels is measured. When an absorbing material is bonded on a single plate, a remarkable transmitted noise reduction in the midfrequency region is observed except for the fundamental resonance frequency of the plate. By enabling the piezoelectric shunt damping, noise reduction is achieved at the resonance frequency as well. Piezoelectric smart panels incorporating passive absorbing material and piezoelectric shunt damping is a promising technology for noise reduction over a broadband of frequencies.

[1]  Robert L. Forward,et al.  Electronic damping of vibrations in optical structures. , 1979, Applied optics.

[2]  Chris R. Fuller,et al.  Active control of sound transmission/radiation from elastic plates by vibration inputs. I - Analysis , 1990 .

[3]  Andrew J. Fleming,et al.  Synthetic impedance for implementation of piezoelectric shunt-damping circuits , 2000 .

[4]  Jaehwan Kim,et al.  New shunting parameter tuning method for piezoelectric damping based on measured electrical impedance , 2000 .

[5]  Nesbitt W. Hagood,et al.  Damping of structural vibrations with piezoelectric materials and passive electrical networks , 1991 .

[6]  Shoko Yoshikawa,et al.  Monolithic piezoelectric actuators and vibration dampers with interdigital electrodes , 1999, Smart Structures.

[7]  Jaehwan Kim,et al.  Modeling of piezoelectric smart structures including absorbing materials for cabin noise problems , 1999, Smart Structures.

[8]  J. Bolton,et al.  Random incidence transmission loss of lined, finite double panel systems , 1989 .

[9]  T. Shrout,et al.  Ultrahigh strain and piezoelectric behavior in relaxor based ferroelectric single crystals , 1997 .

[10]  J. Hollkamp Multimodal Passive Vibration Suppression with Piezoelectric Materials and Resonant Shunts , 1994 .

[11]  Hiroshi Matsuhisa,et al.  Passive Vibration Suppression of Beam with Piezoelectric Elements : An Approach Using Analogies between Electrical and Mechanical Circuits , 2000 .

[12]  Chris R. Fuller,et al.  Smart foam for applications in passive–active noise radiation control , 1997 .

[13]  Shu-yau Wu,et al.  Method for multiple-mode shunt damping of structural vibration using a single PZT transducer , 1998, Smart Structures.