Intraglottal pressure distributions depend upon glottal shape, size, and diameter. This study reports the effects of varying glottal angle on intraglottal and transglottal pressures using a three-dimensional Plexiglas™ model with a glottis having nine symmetric glottal angles and a constant minimal glottal diameter of 0.06cm. The empirical data were supported by computational results using FLUENT. The results suggested that (1) the greater the convergent glottal angle, the greater outward driving forces (higher intraglottal pressures) on the vocal folds; (2) flow resistance was greatest for the uniform glottis, and least for the 10° divergent glottis; (3) the greatest negative pressure in the glottis and therefore the greatest pressure recovery for diverging glottal shapes occurred for an angle of 10°; (4) the smaller the convergent angle, the greater the flow resistance; (5) FLUENT was highly accurate in predicting the empirical pressures of this model; (6) flow separation locations (given by FLUENT) for the divergent glottis moved upstream for larger flows and larger glottal angles. The results suggest that phonatory efficiency related to aerodynamics may be enhanced with vocal fold oscillations that include large convergent angles during glottal opening and small (5°–10°) divergent angles during glottal closing.
CITATION STYLE
Li, S., Scherer, R. C., Wan, M., Wang, S., & Wu, H. (2006). The effect of glottal angle on intraglottal pressure. The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 119(1), 539–548. https://doi.org/10.1121/1.2133491
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