Refine Your Search

Search Results

Viewing 1 to 6 of 6
Technical Paper

Study of the Glass Contribution to the Interior Acoustics of a Car and Related Countermeasures

2020-09-30
2020-01-1585
This paper shows that the combination of a glass and passive acoustic treatment manufacturers can bring different benefits and considerably improve the interior acoustics of a vehicle. Glazing contributes to the design of the vehicle in addition to its primary role, good visibility and safety. From an acoustic point of view, this brings a challenge for the interior comfort. Indeed, glazing has no absorption and classically has an acoustic insulation weakness around its coincident frequency. In most of the cases, these different aspects make glazing one of the main contributors to the sound pressure level in the passenger compartment, and the trend is not one of change. However, there are possible countermeasures. One of which is the use of laminated glazing with acoustic PVB. This solution allows reducing the loss of insulation performance at the coincidence frequency. The other is the usage of passive interior acoustic trims.
Journal Article

A FE Based Procedure for Optimal Design of Damping Package, with Presence of the Insulation Trim

2011-05-17
2011-01-1693
Typically, in the automotive industry, the design of the body damping treatment package with respect to NVH targets is carried out in such a way to achieve panel mobility targets, within given weight and cost constraints. Vibration mobility reduction can be efficiently achieved thanks to dedicated CAE FE tools, which can take into account the properties of damping composites, and also, which can provide their optimal location on the body structure, for a minimal added mass and a maximized efficiency. This need has led to the development of different numerical design and optimization strategies, all based on the modeling of the damping composites by mean of equivalent shell representations, which is a versatile solution for the full vehicle simulation with various damping layouts.
Technical Paper

FE Analysis of a Partially Trimmed Vehicle using Poroelastic Finite Elements Based on Biot's Theory

2007-05-15
2007-01-2330
A poroelastic material can be represented as a material that is constituted by two phases: a structural phase given by a solid frame, and a fluid phase given by the air that fills the pores of the solid frame itself. In the mid frequency range, the physical behavior of both phases and their interactions need to be properly modeled in order to predict accurately the dynamic behavior of the porous material. This can be done using finite elements based on Biot's theory, which describes the macroscopic behavior of poroelastic materials by characterizing them through a set of parameters directly measured on material samples. In this paper, numerical/experimental correlations obtained using two commercial software programs that implement libraries of poroelastic materials are presented. A free-free steel plate covered by a 20mm thick layer of foam and a massive heavy layer has been selected as a first test case.
Technical Paper

On Some Important Practical Aspects Related to the Measurement of the Diffuse Field Absorption Coefficient in Small Reverberation Rooms

2013-05-13
2013-01-1972
The use of small reverberation rooms for the measurement of the Diffuse Field Absorption Coefficient (DFAC) is common practice in the automotive industry. Such practice brings with itself a few issues, related to the limited size of the measurement environment. Some of these issues (e.g. measurements’ repeatability and reproducibility) have already been thoroughly investigated in articles published at past SAE NV Conferences. This paper intends to focus on some other “minor” aspects related to the measurement of DFAC in small reverberation rooms that so far have received little attention but that can, anyhow, have a non-negligible influence on the measurement results, in particular when they have to be compared to target curves.
Technical Paper

Improved NVH Performance Via Genetic Optimization of Damping and Shape of Vehicle Panels

2005-05-16
2005-01-2329
The present work explains an innovative design methodology that allows efficient optimizations of vehicle body panels and treatments towards shorter development time and improved vehicle Noise and Vibration Harshness (NVH) characteristics. This tool named GOLD (Genetic Optimization for Lighter Damping), internally developed by Rieter Automotive, can be embedded into vehicle Computer Aided Engineering (CAE) design flow and can be then used in providing design and platform component sharing guidance information before prototype vehicles are available. GOLD is able to detect the optimal design of vehicle panel shape and damping packages with respect to NVH targets, by means of vibro-acoustic simulations. The core of this tool are the Genetic algorithms (GAs) which are heuristic methods which have been already successfully used, in several research fields, to solve search and optimization problems with a very large number of variables.
Technical Paper

Estimating a Viscous Damping Model for a Vibrating Panel in contact with an Acoustic Trim Enhanced with Particle Dampers.

2024-06-12
2024-01-2917
Dampers (PDs) are passive devices employed in vibration and noise control applications. They consist of a cavity filled with particles that, when fixed to a vibrating structure, dissipate vibrational energy through friction and collisions among the particles. These devices have been extensively documented in the literature and find widespread use in reducing vibrations in structural machinery components subjected to significant dynamic loads during operation. However, their application in reducing vehicle interior sound has received, up to now, relatively little attention. Previous work by the authors has proven the effectiveness of particle dampers in mitigating vibrations in vehicle body panels, achieving a notable reduction in structure-borne noise within the vehicle cabin with an additional weight comparable to or even lower than that of bituminous damping treatments traditionally used for this purpose.
X