This paper investigates the feasibility to use an electrodynamic loudspeaker to determine viscoelastic properties of sound-absorbing materials in the audible frequency range. The loudspeaker compresses the porous sample in a cavity, and a measurement of its electrical impedance allows one to determine the mechanical impedance of the sample: no additional sensors are required. Viscoelastic properties of the material are then estimated by inverting a 1D Biot model. The method is applied to two sound-absorbing materials (glass wool and polymer foam). Results are in good agreement with the classical compression quasistatic method.
CITATION STYLE
Doutres, O., Dauchez, N., Génevaux, J.-M., & Lemarquand, G. (2008). On the use of a loudspeaker for measuring the viscoelastic properties of sound absorbing materials. The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 124(6), EL335–EL340. https://doi.org/10.1121/1.3008067
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