Refine Your Search

Search Results

Viewing 1 to 10 of 10
Technical Paper

Inter-Laboratory Characterization of Biot Parameters of Poro-Elastic Materials for Automotive Applications

2020-09-30
2020-01-1523
Automotive suppliers provide multi-layer trims mainly made of porous materials. They have a real expertise on the characterization and the modeling of poro-elastic materials. A dozen parameters are used to characterize the acoustical and elastical behavior of such materials. The recent vibro-acoustic simulation tools enable to take into account this type of material but require the Biot parameters as input. Several characterization methods exist and the question of reproducibility and confidence in the parameters arises. A Round Robin test was conducted on three poro-elastic material with four laboratories. Compared to other Round Robin test on the characterization of acoustical and elastical parameters of porous material, this one is more specific since the four laboratories are familiar with automotive applications. Methods and results are compared and discussed in this work.
Technical Paper

Vehicle Acoustic Synthesis Method 2nd Generation: New Developments with p-u Probes Allowing to Simulate Unsteady Operative Conditions Like Run-Ups

2007-05-15
2007-01-2271
The challenge of a NVH development is to define a link between the target of the OEMs expressed in terms of acoustic performance, weight and cost and the design of the optimized acoustic package reaching this target. The “Vehicle Acoustic Synthesis Method” (VASM) has been developed in order to create this link. The VASM method, which is an energy based hybrid simulation technique, calculates the Sound Pressure Level at ear location from the combination of sound power measurements and acoustic frequency response functions (FRF) panel/ear, either measured or simulated with Ray-Tracing Methods.
Technical Paper

SONVERT: Hybrid Traffic Noise Simulation Approach

2009-05-19
2009-01-2218
The purpose of the SONVERT project is to create a link between the acoustical sources of a car and the environment in terms of traffic and architecture. Based on well validated approaches, it introduces the notion of a “macro-source” which integrates the major acoustic sources: engine, tires and exhaust, taking into account the low and high frequency aspects, from measurements made on real vehicles. The macro-source is then integrated into an original approach dealing with outdoor propagation. The proposed method can consequently be seen as a first step toward a global approach for the study of traffic noise in real conditions.
Technical Paper

Generalized Light-Weight Concepts: Improving the Acoustic Performance of Less than 2500 g/m2 Insulators

2009-05-19
2009-01-2136
The weight reduction challenge has taken a new shape in the past two years due to high pressure on CO2 emissions in the automotive industry. The new question is: what level of acoustic performance can you get with an insulator weighting less than 2500 g/m2? The existing solutions at this weight being mainly dissipative (absorption) concepts give a satisfactory performance only if the pass-throughs are poor and present critical leakages. Respecting the less than 2500 g/m2 weight target, we have developed a wide range of new or optimized concepts switching from extremely absorbing to highly insulating noise treatments playing with multi-layers insulators (typically three to four layers), in combination or not with tunable absorbers on the other side of the metal sheet (in the engine compartment for example).
Technical Paper

Comprehensive Hybrid Stiff Insulators Family: The Chips Urethane Contribution

2017-06-05
2017-01-1883
The lightweighting research on noise treatments since years tends to prove the efficiency of the combination of good insulation with steep insulation slopes with broadband absorption, even in the context of bad passthroughs management implying strong leakages. The real issue lies more in the industrial capacity to adapt the barrier mass per unit area to the acoustic target from low to high segment or from low petrol to high diesel sources, while remaining easy to manipulate. The hybrid stiff insulator family can realize this easily with hard felts barriers backfoamed weighting from 800 g/m2 to 2000 g/m2 typically with compressions below 10 mm. Above these equivalent barrier weights and traditional compressions of 7 mm for example, the high density of the felts begins to destroy the open porosity and thus the absorption properties (insulation works anyway here, whenever vibration modes do not appear due to too high stiffness…).
Technical Paper

Vehicle Acoustic Synthesis Method: Improving Acquisition Time by Using P-U Probes

2005-05-16
2005-01-2444
In order to reach OEMs acoustic treatment targets (improving performance while minimizing the weight and cost impact), we have developed an original hybrid approach called “Vehicle Acoustic synthesis method”[1] to simulate - and therefore to optimize - noise treatments for both insulation and absorption, and to calculate the resulting Sound Pressure Level (SPL) at ear points for the middle and high frequency range. To calculate the SPL, we identify equivalent volume velocity sources from intensity measurements, and combine them to acoustic transfer functions (panel/ear) measured or computed with ray tracing codes using the reciprocity principle. Compared to our first approach [1], this paper shows a new measurement technique using pressure-particle velocity probes [2]. This technique allows to reduce acquisition time by a factor four, and makes therefore possible a synthesis method on a complete car within two weeks.
Technical Paper

An Alternative Solution to Vehicles Audio System using Inertial Transducers Integrated in Trim Parts: Advanced Developments.

2022-06-15
2022-01-0970
The use of inertial transducers to replace traditional loudspeakers is an innovative way to reproduce a quality audio signal in a vehicle cockpit while significantly reducing on-board mass and overall volume of the audio system. An electrodynamic inertial exciter is an actuator commonly used for the realization of distributed mode loudspeakers or DML (Distributed Mode Loudspeaker) to generate vibrations of a panel radiating an acoustic wave. As for a loudspeaker, an inertial exciter implements a coupling process and is based on the interactions between a current and a magnetic field. The coil is movable and the magnetic mass stationary in the case of the loudspeaker, while the reverse is true for the inertial exciter. This paper presents the development process of a new inertial transducer and its optimization by digital simulation, validated by tests on physical prototypes.
Technical Paper

Ecofelt Hybrid Stiff NVH Tunable Insulator

2018-06-13
2018-01-1494
Whenever the noise source level or the expected acoustic comfort increases for diesel engines for example or for premium petrol vehicles, the required weight per unit area can be specified above 2000 g/m2 for the equivalent barrier of a mixed absorbing-insulating noise treatment. For an ABA foam/heavy layer/felt insulator, this is not a big issue, one has to increase the intermediate heavy layer weight. For hybrid stiff compressed felt backfoamed standard technologies, going above 2000 g/m2 is critical due to absorption properties loss following much too high airflow resistances and progressive porosity loss (above 250 kg/m3) as well as too high bending stiffness presenting resonant modes progressively and assembly manipulation issues. Last but not least, compressed felts begin to present too high costs at these weights against those of the heavy layers of ABA systems.
Technical Paper

Vibro-Acoustic Properties of a Very Long Flax Fibers Reinforced Thermoset “Flaxpreg” Light Sandwich

2015-06-15
2015-01-2345
The Flaxpreg is a green and light very long flax fibers thermoset reinforced sandwich, which can be effectively used as multi-position trunk loadfloor or structural floor in the passenger compartment of a vehicle. The prepreg FlaxTapes of about 120 g/m2 constituting the skins of the sandwich, are unidirectionally aligned flax fibers tapes, with acrylic resin here, easily manipulable without requiring any spinning or weaving step and thus without any negative out of plane crimping of the almost continuous flax fibers. Thanks to their very low 1.45 kg/dm3 density combined with an adaptive 0°/90°/0° orientation of the FlaxTapes (for each skin) depending on the loading boundary conditions, the resulting excellent mechanical properties allow a - 35% weight reduction compared to petro-sourced Glass mat/PUR sandwich solutions (like the Baypreg).
Technical Paper

Fast Broadband Curved Insertion Loss Simulation of an Inner Dash Insulator Using a Cylindrical Transfer Matrix Method Spectral Approach

2019-06-05
2019-01-1583
Middle and high frequency vibro-acoustic simulation of complex shape insulators requires using 3D poroelastic finite elements. This can be applied to either the whole part (up to 2500 Hz maximum) or through singly curved pre-computed Insertion Losses (up to 5000 Hz maximum) to be introduced in large SEA or energy-based models. Indeed, a dependence of the Insertion Loss slopes of noise treatments following the curvature is observed both experimentally and numerically. Beyond frequency range limitations, poroelastic finite element simulations following all curvatures and thickness 3D maps typically take too much time of up to a few hours each. A cylindrical Transfer Matrix Method spectral approach significantly reduces the time for the calculation of singly curved Insertion Losses up to 10 kHz to only a few minutes. This simplifies enormously the SEA modeling effort enabling easier, more precise fully trimmed vehicle middle and high frequency vibro-acoustic simulations.
X