Adaptive Multigrid for Helmholtz Problems

2003 ◽  
Vol 11 (03) ◽  
pp. 341-350 ◽  
Author(s):  
Guido Bartsch ◽  
Christian Wulf

Solving Helmholtz problems for low frequency sound fields by a truncated modal basis approach is very efficient. The most time-consuming process is the calculation of the undamped modes. Using traditional FE solvers, the user has to provide a mesh which has at least six nodes per wavelength in each spatial direction to achieve acceptable results. Because the mesh size increases with the 3rd power of the highest frequency of interest, this uniform dense mesh approach is a very expensive way of creating a modal space. However, the number of modes and the accuracy of the modal basis directly influences the solution quality. It is well known that the representation of sound fields by modal basis functions φi is optimal with respect to the L2 error norm. This means that having a modal basis Φ := {φi, i = 1⋯n}, the distance between true and approximated sound field takes its minimum in the mean square. So, it is necessary to have a FE basis which also minimizes the discretization error when computing the modal basis. One can reach this goal by applying adaptive mesh refinements. Additionally, this yields the opportunity of using fast multigrid methods to solve discrete eigenvalue problems. In context of this presentation we will discuss the results of our adaptive multigrid algorithms.

Acta Acustica ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 5 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thach Pham Vu ◽  
Hervé Lissek

An accurate knowledge of the sound field distribution inside a room is required to identify and optimally locate corrective measures for room acoustics. However, the spatial recovery of the sound field would result in an impractically high number of microphones in the room. Fortunately, at low frequencies, the possibility to rely on a sparse description of sound fields can help reduce the total number of measurement points without affecting the accuracy of the reconstruction. In this paper, the use of Greedy algorithm and Global curve-fitting techniques are proposed, in order to first recover the modal parameters of the room, and then to reconstruct the entire enclosed sound field at low frequencies, using a reasonably low set of measurements. First, numerical investigations are conducted on a non-rectangular room configuration, with different acoustic properties, in order to analyze various aspects of the reconstruction frameworks such as accuracy and robustness. The model is then validated with an experimental study in an actual reverberation chamber. The study yields promising results in which the enclosed sound field can be faithfully reconstructed using a practically feasible number of microphones, even in complex-shaped and damped rooms.


2018 ◽  
Vol 37 (2) ◽  
pp. 394-406 ◽  
Author(s):  
Siu-Kit Lau ◽  
Eric A Powell

Room resonances create dramatic fluctuations in the distribution of sound pressure throughout the listening region of a room. Previous studies indicate that the addition of sound absorbing material decreases room resonances and shifts its modal characteristics. The present study proposes an approach which qualifies the effects that the additional absorption in a listening room may have on the sound fields and the frequency responses. Finite element analysis was employed for modelling the low-frequency responses of a room. The study analyses frequency responses at various listening positions involving different amounts and different placement of sound absorbents on room surfaces by observing standard deviation for linearity across a chosen frequency range. Two-dimensional sound field plots at listening height were also used to examine the spatial changes of room resonances caused by the additional absorption. The present study applied a modified statistical approach to evaluate both the sound field and the frequency responses of a room. The results were then applied to re-evaluate the effects of the absorbers location on the listening region through the proposed approach.


2009 ◽  
Vol 17 (04) ◽  
pp. 365-382 ◽  
Author(s):  
ELDAD J. AVITAL ◽  
GUANGXU YU ◽  
JOHN WILLIAMS

The near sound field generated due to a vertically mounted circular cylinder piercing a free surface in shallow water, is studied computationally using the Large Eddy Simulation (LES) approach and the sound wave equation. The flow is simulated in both the air and water phases. The interface surface is allowed to move and is simulated using the Volume of Fluid technique. The pressure distribution over the cylinder is fed back into the sound wave equation to calculate the near field. The interface surface is modeled as a zero pressure surface in the acoustic calculation and the bottom is taken as having infinite impedence modeling the case of a rigid floor. Two of acoustic calculations methods are used. In the first method, the interface surface is assumed to be fixed and the wave equation is solved in the frequency domain in a post-processing stage. In the second method, the evolution of the interface surface is taken into account and the wave equation is simulated simultaneously with the LES. Both solutions are analyzed and compared to show that the interface surface acts as a strong damper to the low frequency sound by damping the vortex Von Karman rollers as well as causing the low frequency component to be nonradiative. The variation of the near sound field with the water depth and Froude number is investigated and the propagation and damping characteristics are analyzed.


Sensors ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 18 (11) ◽  
pp. 3674 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wei Lu ◽  
Yu Lan ◽  
Rongzhen Guo ◽  
Qicheng Zhang ◽  
Shichang Li ◽  
...  

A spiral sound wave transducer comprised of longitudinal vibrating elements has been proposed. This transducer was made from eight uniform radial distributed longitudinal vibrating elements, which could effectively generate low frequency underwater acoustic spiral waves. We discuss the production theory of spiral sound waves, which could be synthesized by two orthogonal acoustic dipoles with a phase difference of 90 degrees. The excitation voltage distribution of the transducer for emitting a spiral sound wave and the measurement method for the transducer is given. Three-dimensional finite element modeling (FEM)of the transducer was established for simulating the vibration modes and the acoustic characteristics of the transducers. Further, we fabricated a spiral sound wave transducer based on our design and simulations. It was found that the resonance frequency of the transducer was 10.8 kHz and that the transmitting voltage resonance was 140.5 dB. The underwater sound field measurements demonstrate that our designed transducer based on the longitudinal elements could successfully generate spiral sound waves.


Author(s):  
Heather L. Lai ◽  
Brian Hamilton

Abstract This paper investigates the use of two room acoustics metrics designed to evaluate the degree to which the linearity assumptions of the energy density curves are valid. The study focuses on measured and computer-modeled energy density curves derived from the room impulse response of a space exhibiting a highly non-diffuse sound field due to flutter echo. In conjunction with acoustical remediation, room impulse response measurements were taken before and after the installation of the acoustical panels. A very dramatic decrease in the reverberation time was experienced due to the addition of the acoustical panels. The two non-linearity metrics used in this study are the non-linearity parameter and the curvature. These metrics are calculated from the energy decay curves computed per octave band, based on the definitions presented in ISO 3382-2. The non-linearity parameter quantifies the deviation of the EDC from a straight line fit used to generated T20 and T30 reverberation times. Where the reverberation times are calculated based on a linear regression of the data relating to either −5 to −25 dB for T20 or −5 to −35 dB for T30 reverberation time calculations. This deviation is quantified using the correlation coefficient between the energy decay curve and the linear regression for the specified data. In order to graphically demonstrate these non-linearity metrics, the energy decay curves are plotted along with the linear regression curves for the T20 and T30 reverberation time for both the measured data and two different room acoustics computer-modeling techniques, geometric acoustics modeling and finite-difference wave-based modeling. The intent of plotting these curves together is to demonstrate the relationship between these metrics and the energy decay curve, and to evaluate their use for quantifying degree of non-linearity in non-diffuse sound fields. Observations of these graphical representations are used to evaluate the accuracy of reverberation time estimations in non-diffuse environments, and to evaluate the use of these non-linearity parameters for comparison of different computer-modeling techniques or room configurations. Using these techniques, the non-linearity parameter based on both T20 and T30 linear regression curves and the curvature parameter were calculated over 250–4000 Hz octave bands for the measured and computer-modeled room impulse response curves at two different locations and two different room configurations. Observations of these calculated results are used to evaluate the consistency of these metrics, and the application of these metrics to quantifying the degree of non-linearity of the energy decay curve derived from a non-diffuse sound field. These calculated values are also used to evaluate the differences in the degree of diffusivity between the measured and computer-modeled room impulse response. Acoustical computer modeling is often based on geometrical acoustics using ray-tracing and image-source algorithms, however, in non-diffuse sound fields, wave based methods are often able to better model the characteristic sound wave patterns that are developed. It is of interest to study whether these improvements in the wave based computer-modeling are also reflected in the non-linearity parameter calculations. The results showed that these metrics provide an effective criteria for identifying non-linearity in the energy decay curve, however for highly non-diffuse sound fields, the resulting values were found to be very sensitive to fluctuations in the energy decay curves and therefore, contain inconsistencies due to these differences.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ankit Vajpayee

Abstract The inspection of the steel legs that hold up gas storage spheres has been difficult because of the thickness of cement that is applied to the legs to make them "fireproof". The cement contains steel studs that are welded to the legs and wire mesh that may vary in mesh size, all of which complicate the inspection possibilities. A new, low frequency AC scanning technique has been developed which can detect corrosion under fireproofing (CUF). The technique and its industry-supported development is described.


2021 ◽  
Vol 263 (1) ◽  
pp. 5571-5577
Author(s):  
Reiji Tomiku ◽  
Noriko Okamoto ◽  
Toru Otsuru ◽  
Shun Iwamoto ◽  
Shoma Suzuki

The absorption coefficients in a reverberation room are most representative measure for evaluating absorption performance of architectural materials. However, it is well known that measurement results of the coefficient vary according to a room shape of the measurement and area of the specimen. Numerical analyses based on wave acoustics are effective tools to investigate these factors on absorption coefficient measurement in reverberation room. In this study, sound fields for the measurement of absorption coefficient in reverberation room are analyzed by time domain finite element method (TDFEM). This study shows effectiveness of the analysis for investigation on causes of variation in the measurement results and improvement methods of the measurement. First, some measurement sound fields for absorption coefficient in reverberation rooms the walls of which are incline or decline are analyzed by the TDFEM. Next, reverberation times in each sound fields are calculated from the results obtained by TDFEM and the absorption coefficients are evaluated from the reverberation time of the room with and without specimen. Finally, the relationships among room shape, degree of inclination of the wall, the sound absorption coefficient of the specimen, frequencies and the measurement absorption coefficient are investigated.


2019 ◽  
Vol 26 (2) ◽  
pp. 93-108
Author(s):  
Juan Negreira ◽  
Anders Sjöström ◽  
Dag Glebe

The low-frequency properties of a room (where statistical methods in the standards cannot be applied directly) are often hard to estimate due to strong modal behaviour. The situation gets complicated by the fact that variations in the furnishing can have an impact on the modal patterns and therefore can also influence the results of measurements at certain points, in spite of the room properties being the same. The latter can hinder the achievement of acoustic comfort in dwellings, even if they comply with the current regulations, especially due to the fact that low-frequency noise is left outside the scope, since the standards currently in force do not require measurements below 100 Hz (albeit Sweden set 50 Hz as lower limit). This article aims to study variations of the sound field that results of varying the position of three moderately absorbing boards, which emulate how very sparse furniture can impact the sound field when relocated in the room. Furthermore, the potential of numerical models as prediction tools for such problems is pointed out.


Sensors ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 18 (10) ◽  
pp. 3446 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiaohan Wang ◽  
Shangchun Piao ◽  
Yahui Lei ◽  
Nansong Li

Ocean Bottom Seismometers (OBS) placed on the seafloor surface are utilized for measuring the ocean bottom seismic waves. The vibration of OBS excited by underwater noise on its surface may interfere with its measured results of seismic waves. In this particular study, an OBS was placed on the seabed, while ray acoustic theory was used to deduce the sound field distribution around the OBS. Then using this information, the analytical expression for the OBS vibration velocity was obtained in order to find various factors affecting its amplitude. The finite element computing software COMSOL Multiphysics® (COMSOL) was used to obtain the vibration response model of the OBS which was exposed to underwater noise. The vibration velocity for the OBS calculated by COMSOL agreed with the theoretical result. Moreover, the vibration velocity of OBS with different densities, shapes, and characters were investigated as well. An OBS with hemispherical shape, consistent average density as that of the seafloor, and a physical structure of double tank has displayed minimum amplitude of vibration velocity. The proposed COMSOL model predicted the impact of underwater noise while detecting the ocean bottom seismic waves with the OBS. In addition, it provides significant help for the design and optimization of an appropriate OBS.


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