In-Ear Earphone
20170251297 · 2017-08-31
Inventors
Cpc classification
G10K11/17875
PHYSICS
H04S7/302
ELECTRICITY
G10K11/17885
PHYSICS
International classification
H04R1/28
ELECTRICITY
G10K11/178
PHYSICS
Abstract
An in-ear earphone includes a body configured to be placed at the entrance to or to be inserted at least in part into the auditory canal of a user's ear, the body housing an electro-acoustic driver and defining a passageway structure extending from the electro-acoustic driver to an opening in an outer surface of the body for allowing sound generated by the electro-acoustic driver to pass into the auditory canal of the user's ear. The passageway structure includes a flow divider section positioned to receive forward-radiated sound from the electro-acoustic driver, an output passageway extending from the flow divider section to the opening in the body, and an unvented enclosure in fluid communication with the flow divider section and operative to provide an acoustic impedance in parallel to the output passageway.
Claims
1. An in-ear earphone comprising: a body configured to be placed at the entrance to or to be inserted at least in part into the auditory canal of a user's ear, the body housing an electro-acoustic driver and defining a passageway structure extending from the electro-acoustic driver to an opening in an outer surface of the body for allowing sound generated by the electro-acoustic driver to pass into the auditory canal of the user's ear; wherein the passageway structure comprises: a flow divider section positioned to receive forward-radiated sound from the electro-acoustic driver; an output passageway extending from the flow divider section to the opening in the body; and an unvented enclosure in fluid communication with the flow divider section and operative to provide an acoustic impedance in parallel to the output passageway.
2. An in-ear earphone according to claim 1, wherein the unvented enclosure presents an air-filled volume having a value of acoustic compliance greater than 0.1 times the expected acoustic compliance of the auditory canal of the user's ear.
3. An in-ear earphone according to claim 1, wherein the flow divider section comprises a bifurcated passageway section.
4. An in-ear earphone according to claim 1, wherein the unvented enclosure comprises an elongate acoustic waveguide.
5. An in-ear earphone according to claim 4, wherein the elongate acoustic waveguide includes at least one folded portion.
6. An in-ear earphone according to claim 1, wherein the unvented enclosure comprises a chamber configured to provide a lumped compliance.
7. An in-ear earphone according to claim 6, wherein the chamber is connected to the flow divider section by a further passageway.
8. An in-ear earphone according to claim 1, wherein the unvented enclosure comprises a resonance suppression element.
9. An in-ear earphone according to claim 1, wherein the in-ear earphone further comprises a sensing microphone coupled to the body for providing a feedback signal to a signal processor, the sensing microphone comprising a sensing element positioned to sense pressure changes in the auditory canal of the user's ear to provide a feedback signal to a signal processor.
10. An in-ear earphone according to claim 9, wherein the sensing microphone is located outside of the unvented enclosure.
11. An in-ear earphone according to claim 1, wherein the unvented enclosure is longitudinally spaced from the output passageway by the flow divider section and/or electro-acoustic driver.
12. An in-ear earphone according to claim 1, wherein the unvented enclosure is laterally spaced from the output passageway relative to the longitudinal axis of the body.
13. An in-ear earphone according to claim 12, wherein the electro-acoustic driver and unvented enclosure are located on opposed sides of the longitudinal axis of the body.
14. An in-ear earphone according to claim 1, wherein the waveguide is at least in part defined by a protuberant element of the body extending from a main body portion housing the electro-acoustic driver, the protuberant element being configured to assist location of the in-ear earphone in a user's ear.
15. An in-ear earphone according to claim 14, wherein the protuberant element is movable relative to the main body portion between an insertion position and an installed position in which a part of the protuberant element engages with a part of the user's ear.
16. An in-ear earphone according to claim 15, wherein the protuberant element is biased in the installed position.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
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[0068] In use, as seen in
[0069] However, as is expressed diagrammatically in
[0070] The consequences of the introduction of the unvented enclosure 41 are introduced by comparison of a simple analogous circuit of the new teaching with the prior art earphone. This is described in connection with
[0071] The introduction of the unvented enclosure 41 communicating with the enclosed volume of air in the canal of the user of an earphone will address at least the following intended benefits:
[0072] Improved fit tolerance—the earphone will deliver performance closer to the intended frequency response over a greater range of fit/seal conditions, due to the reduced source impedance.
[0073] Improved Wearer-to-wearer consistency—the earphone will deliver greater consistency between wearers having different outer ear geometries, due to the reduced source impedance.
[0074] Improved passive attenuation—the earphone will deliver higher levels of passive attenuation, due to the increased acoustic compliance of the volume of air protected around the eardrum.
[0075] Improved Stability—in the context of the application of active control measures to the earphone, the reduced load sensitivity conferred by the reduction of the acoustic source impedance of the earphone will result in an increase in stability margin of the control system
[0076] These significant benefits are won at the expense of only one significant disadvantage—the provision of space to accommodate the additional physical volume. It is intended that this space be provided within the main body of the instrument and/or within protrusions from that body intended to assist in locating the instrument within the ear. As the typical enclosed volume of the (occluded) ear is of order 2 ml, this volume will not be difficult to accommodate in an instrument intended to occupy the concha, which has typical volume of 4 ml. The unvented enclosure (or the instrument itself) may extend outside the concha.
[0077] Although the physical configuration of the new earphone 40 is very different from the prior art earphone with intentional leak 32 their simple analogous circuits (see
[0078] Note further that the precise location of the leak to ambient 32 in the prior art device is immaterial (to the low orders of approximation used in the analogous circuits shown in this document and familiar in the art). All that a change of location of the leak 32 of
[0079] The unvented enclosure 41 may take several forms, implying both several different possible means of implementation and several different modes of acoustic operation. Some examples of these alternative implementations are illustrated in
[0080] The earphone 70 includes an unvented enclosure of elongate section with a sealed distal end, 71. This acoustic waveguide element will operate properly to lower the acoustic source impedance of the earphone at low frequencies, but may exhibit acoustic resonances at higher frequencies. The earphone 72 includes a waveguide implementation of the unvented enclosure, but this is filled with a damping medium, illustrated by the material suggested by the dots 73 designed to suppress resonance. This resonance suppression element 73 makes the unvented enclosure an anechoic waveguide, which does not support resonances. The implementation of acoustic damping within the waveguide by other means familiar within acoustical engineering—such as the introduction of honeycomb lattice structures (from analogies with loudspeaker enclosure manufacture) or the provision of layered, axial fins in the waveguide (from e.g. analogies with laminar fans) provide alternative, practical implementation means for the anechoic waveguide.
[0081] It will be understood by ordinarily skilled practitioners that an anechoic waveguide may be arranged to present “characteristic” input impedance. By control of the cross sectional area of such an anechoic waveguide, the said component may be used to provide (to first degree of approximation) a resistive acoustic impedance of arbitrary magnitude. This concept will be used in an illustrative example, below.
[0082] The earphone 74 uses an unvented enclosure in the form of a waveguide (understood to be in the anechoic embodiment) but folds it at one or more points along its length, to make a folded waveguide 75. Equivalently, the number of folds can increase to the point where the waveguide is curved. The act of folding the waveguide has the desirable consequences of both making the waveguide spatially compact, allowing it to be integrated into the physical form-factor of an earphone more easily, and further adding to acoustic losses in the system. The effects of the folds tend to break up the formation of (low-order) modes in the waveguide and serve to add acoustic resistance.
[0083] The earphone 76 uses a lumped acoustic volume 77 to implement the unvented enclosure. This presents an acoustic compliance at low frequencies where it does not present the same explicit resonances as the “waveguide” implementations above—although such resonances do start to appear at higher frequencies, when the dimensions of the unvented enclosure 77 start to look significant compared to the acoustic wavelength. At these higher frequencies, the volume element may be damped (using either of the methods discussed above). Also, in the case of the application of active control, dimensions of the volume may deliberately be selected to support or attenuate unwanted resonances which may occur (e.g. during abnormal loading conditions, such as the blocked case described further below).
[0084] The acoustic compliance of the lumped acoustic volume 77 is given by a standard, well-known equation:
in which C is the acoustic compliance, V is the enclosed volume, ρ.sub.0 is the equilibrium mass density and c is the speed of sound. In addition to describing the acoustic compliance of a lumped compliance element of volume V, this equation gives a useful means to approximate the low-frequency limiting behaviour of the impedance of any unvented volume of air, having volume V.
[0085] Although practical considerations of space will suggest a distal location of the unvented enclosure 41 relative to the receiver 2 this does not preclude other embodiments of the teaching herein.
[0086] Having listed similarities between prior art strategies and the new teaching disclosed herein, it is appropriate to emphasise key differentiating features of the new earphone's architecture. The unvented enclosure 41 of the new earphone is explicitly sealed from ambient acoustic conditions. This has the consequence of introducing all the advantages listed above, some of which also may be delivered—in whole or in part—by prior art strategies. However, the new teaching:
[0087] Does not introduce a transmission path for noise ingress into the earphone, thereby upholding passive noise reduction afforded by the earphone.
[0088] Retains the seal of the headphone at zero frequency, thereby retaining the high load impedance at low frequencies for the operation of certain receiver technologies important to the art of the construction of earphone and having high acoustic source impedance
[0089] We now describe the relative performance of the conventional earphone, as compared to the earphone according to the new teaching, in terms of the circuit analogies of
[0090] The application to Standard Fit conditions is shown in
[0091] The “blocked” condition, illustrated in
[0092] Application of earphones in the presence of a leak is compared in
[0093] Operation of earphones into “free-air” loading is depicted in
[0094] The solutions for the ratio between open-circuit pressure and the pressure at the internal reference position 82 and in the ear 81 for each of the four loading conditions described in
[0095] As it is rather difficult to see the consequences of the additional impedance (Z.sub.shunt) from the solutions in the table, an illustrative example is presented.
[0096] Consider an earphone, constructed according to the new teaching, firing into a load represented by the acoustic input impedance of the IEC711 ear simulator. This generates a known impedance that can be modelled using well-rehearsed approximations, resulting in the frequency-dependent trace 120, shown in
[0097] The next impedance seen in
[0098] The lowest resistive impedance seen in
[0099] The impedances 121 and 123 have been chosen as resistive elements for simplicity; they preserve the key elements of function of the new teaching without risking the confusion of unnecessary detail.
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[0101] The performance of the earphone in standard fit conditions is illustrated in
[0102] The performance of the earphone in blocked conditions is illustrated in
[0103] To illustrate the behaviour in leak conditions a simple, representative leak impedance was established. This is shown in
[0104] The performance of the earphone with the leak to ambient pressure defined by the impedance of
[0105] The performance of the earphone radiating into free-air is illustrated in
[0106] There now are presented two detailed embodiments of the new teaching.
[0107] The first, shown in
[0108] The second detailed embodiment is shown in