SDLGASFeb 6, 2025

A data-driven two-microphone method for in-situ sound absorption measurements

arXiv:2502.04143v14 citationsh-index: 11J Acoust Soc Am
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This is an incremental improvement for acoustic engineers, enabling in-situ measurements after installation.

The paper tackles the problem of estimating sound absorption coefficients of porous materials in real-world conditions by using a neural network with a two-microphone setup, achieving accurate predictions comparable to theoretical and impedance tube methods.

This work presents a data-driven approach to estimating the sound absorption coefficient of an infinite porous slab using a neural network and a two-microphone measurement on a finite porous sample. A 1D-convolutional network predicts the sound absorption coefficient from the complex-valued transfer function between the sound pressure measured at the two microphone positions. The network is trained and validated with numerical data generated by a boundary element model using the Delany-Bazley-Miki model, demonstrating accurate predictions for various numerical samples. The method is experimentally validated with baffled rectangular samples of a fibrous material, where sample size and source height are varied. The results show that the neural network offers the possibility to reliably predict the in-situ sound absorption of a porous material using the traditional two-microphone method as if the sample were infinite. The normal-incidence sound absorption coefficient obtained by the network compares well with that obtained theoretically and in an impedance tube. The proposed method has promising perspectives for estimating the sound absorption coefficient of acoustic materials after installation and in realistic operational conditions.

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