QUIET FLIGHT DECK COMMUNICATION USING ULTRASONIC PHASED ARRAY
20220130369 · 2022-04-28
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
H04R2217/03
ELECTRICITY
H04R17/00
ELECTRICITY
H04B11/00
ELECTRICITY
International classification
G10K11/34
PHYSICS
H04B11/00
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
The pilot communication system employs an acoustic transducer disposed on the flight deck and positioned to emit sound waves in the direction of the at least one pilot seating location. A modulator circuit is coupled to receive an audio signal from the avionics communication system and is also coupled to drive the acoustic transducer. The modulator circuit supplies to the acoustic transducer an electrical signal having an ultrasonic carrier frequency modulated by the audio signal, thereby causing the acoustic transducer to deliver a beam of ultrasonic acoustic energy, through the acoustic space, in the direction of the at least one pilot seating location, which beam of ultrasonic acoustic energy is demodulated naturally by traversal through air molecules between the transducer and the pilot seating location, thus rendering the audio signal audible by human hearing at the at least one pilot seating location.
Claims
1. In an aircraft flight deck that defines an acoustic space enclosing air molecules and having at least one pilot seating location disposed therein, and that includes an avionics communication system, a pilot communication system comprising: an acoustic transducer disposed on the flight deck and positioned to emit sound waves in the direction of the at least one pilot seating location; a modulator circuit coupled to receive an audio signal from the avionics communication system and also coupled to drive the acoustic transducer, the modulator circuit supplying to the acoustic transducer an electrical signal having an ultrasonic carrier frequency modulated by the audio signal, thereby causing the acoustic transducer to deliver a beam of ultrasonic acoustic energy, through the acoustic space, in the direction of the at least one pilot seating location, which beam of ultrasonic acoustic energy is demodulated naturally by traversal through air molecules between the transducer and the pilot seating location, thus rendering the audio signal audible by human hearing at the at least one pilot seating location.
2. The pilot communication system of claim 1 wherein the acoustic transducer comprises a plurality of transducers arranged in a spaced-apart array fed and asymmetrically fed with respect to time to control the beam direction.
3. The pilot communication system of claim 1 further comprising an acoustic transducer array having plural individually fed transducers, and a multichannel time delay insertion circuit coupled between the modulator circuit and the transducer array to selectively insert predetermined time delays into the feed of each of the plurality of transducers to steer the beam.
4. The pilot communication system of claim 3 wherein the time delay insertion circuit includes an adjustment mechanism to alter the inserted time delays to adjust the pointing direction of the beam.
5. The pilot communication system of claim 1 wherein the ultrasonic carrier frequency defines a carrier wavelength and wherein the acoustic transducer comprises a plurality of transducers arranged in an array of individual transducers each space apart a distance less than or equal to one-half the carrier wavelength.
6. The pilot communication system of claim 1 wherein the acoustic transducer comprises a plurality of transducers arranged in a spaced-apart spatial configuration selected from the group consisting of: linear, curvilinear, circular, concentric circular, square, row cluster array, and spiral and combinations thereof.
7. In an aircraft flight deck that defines an acoustic space having at least two pilot seating locations, the pilot communication system of claim 1 further comprising: a first acoustic transducer disposed on the flight deck and positioned to emit sound waves in the direction of one of the at least one pilot seating locations, and a second acoustic transducer disposed on the flight deck and positioned to emit sound waves in the direction of another of the at least one pilot seating locations.
8. The pilot communication system of claim 1 the acoustic transducer produces an ultrasonic beam having a beam width that is a function of the ultrasonic carrier frequency.
9. The pilot communication system of claim 8 wherein the beam has a divergence angle based on the predetermined spacing and the ultrasonic carrier frequency such that the audio signal is audible at the at least one pilot seating location and substantially inaudible in a passenger cabin area within the aircraft.
10. A method of communicating audio information to the pilot of an aircraft, comprising: obtaining an audio signal from an avionics communication system; modulating the audio signal upon an ultrasonic carrier wave to produce a modulated ultrasonic signal; delivering the modulated ultrasonic signal through an acoustic transducer to the pilot as an ultrasonic acoustic beam that becomes demodulated naturally by traversal through the air between the transducer and the pilot, thus rendering the audio signal audible to the pilot.
11. The method of claim 10 wherein the audio signal carries speech at frequencies audible to the human ear and wherein the ultrasonic carrier wave has a frequency that is above the frequency range of human hearing.
12. The method of claim 10 further comprising delivering the modulated ultrasonic signal individually to each of a plurality of acoustic transducers arranged in an array that steers the direction of the beam by varying the relative time at which the modulated ultrasonic signal is delivered to each of the plurality of transducers.
13. The method of claim 10 further comprising delivering the modulated ultrasonic signal through a plurality of transducers defining an electrically steerable acoustic transducer array, and adjusting the direction of the beam by electrically controlling the relative phase of acoustic waves emitted from each of the plurality of transducers.
14. The method of claim 10 wherein the step of modulating the audio signal upon an ultrasonic carrier wave is performed by electronically multiplying the audio signal and the ultrasonic carrier wave.
15. The method of claim 10 wherein the step of modulating the audio signal upon an ultrasonic carrier wave is performed using a modulation modality selected from the group consisting of amplitude modulation, frequency modulation and pulse width modulation.
16. The method of claim 10 further comprising using plural transducers arranged in a spatial configuration based on a predetermined spacing to deliver the modulated ultrasonic signal to the pilot in a beam having a beam width; and controlling the beam width by controlling the ultrasonic carrier frequency.
17. The method of claim 16 further comprising producing the beam to have a divergence angle based on the predetermined spacing and the ultrasonic carrier frequency such that the audio signal is audible at the pilot and substantially inaudible in a passenger cabin area within the aircraft.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0012] The drawings described herein are for illustrative purposes only of selected embodiments and not all possible implementations. The particular choice of drawings is not intended to limit the scope of the present disclosure.
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0021] Referring to
[0022] The ultrasonic phased array communication system 12 and its associated transducer arrays 14 supply narrow beams 22 of ultrasonic acoustic energy directly to each pilot 20. Each beam comprises an ultrasonic acoustic carrier wave that has been modulated to carry the audio signals from the avionics communication system. The ultrasonic carrier, in an exemplary frequency range from about 30 kHz to 150 kHz, is well above the range of human hearing and is, itself, inaudible.
[0023] While a number of different modulation modes are possible, three have been illustrated in
[0024] Regardless of the modulation mode chosen, the modulated ultrasonic beam becomes naturally demodulated by passage through the air. Thus, as a natural consequence of interacting with air molecules in the acoustic space traversed by the beam, the signal is demodulated thus rendering the audio signal containing the message from the avionics communication system audible to the pilot 20.
[0025] The ultrasonic phased array preferably comprises a tightly grouped plurality of individual acoustic transducers, such as piezoelectric transducers. The close transducer spacing, combined with the high frequency ultrasonic carrier produces a narrow beam that concentrates the acoustic energy so that it travels preferably line-of-sight from transducer array directly to the pilot. In a practical embodiment, five watts of electrical power to the transducer array will produce a sound pressure level (SPL) on the order up to 115 dB or higher. More electrical power may be used if higher sound pressure levels (e.g., 140 dB) are desired. In such a system the acoustic signal delivered may have a frequency range from about 500 Hz to 4 kHz, which is usually adequate for good intelligibility of speech signals.
[0026] As the beam travels outwardly from each ultrasonic transducer array, there is minimal beam divergence within the first 2-3 meters from the transducer. Thus the ultrasonic beam will remain very directional to the pilot location and due to the relatively confined geometry of the cockpit, the beam will hit one or more surfaces (sidewalls, ceiling, floor, pilot's clothing, etc.) and become attenuated long before it reaches the cabin. Thus the pilot is able to hear the demodulated audio from his or her seat on the flight deck, but persons seated in the aircraft passenger cabin will not, due to ultrasonic wave absorption from impacting with sound absorbing surfaces, such as the sound absorbing wall and ceiling panels and carpeting, or from passenger clothing.
[0027] In one embodiment, the phased array may be electronically fed with individual signals having carefully controlled individual time or phase delays to affect electronic steering of the beam. To better understand how beam steering is accomplished, refer to
[0028] However, when one of the transducers is fed by a signal that is delayed by a time increment dt, constructive and destructive interference between the respective wavefronts of the two transducers will produce the loudest collective sound in an angled direction, no longer perpendicular but at an angle θ to the horizontal axis, as shown in
f=v/λ
[0029] To steer the beam in the direction (angle θ) illustrated in
dt=s sin(θ)/c
where s is the transducer separation and c is the speed of sound in the air.
[0030] Control over timing (i.e., control over the phase of individual transducer waves) can be used not only to steer the collective ultrasonic beam in a particular direction but also to focus the individual transducer waves onto a desired point. The equation is the same: dt=dx/c. where dx is the difference between the distances from the transducers to the desired point and c is the speed of sound.
[0031] When designing the spacing between transducers, it is recommended to choose a spacing that avoids formation of strong grating lobes or side lobes. Grating lobes are a consequence of having large and uniform distances between the individual transducer elements in relation to the acoustic wavelength. Therefore, preferably small spacing (relative to ultrasonic wavelength) should be chosen, so that grating lobes are minimized. As noted above a spacing of less than ½ wavelength of the ultrasonic carrier may be used to minimize grating lobes or side lobes.
[0032] Referring now to
[0033] If electronic beam steering is desired, this effect is applied by the time delay (phase delay) adjustment circuit 34. The adjustment circuit works by subdividing the modulated ultrasonic carrier into multiple channels, one for each of the individual transducers making up the transducer array 14. The adjustment circuit 34 selectively inserts a calculated time delay into one or more of the individual channels to produce the beam steering effect illustrated in
[0034] In order to produce sufficient sound pressure level at the pilot's location, the circuit includes an amplification stage for each of the multiple channels. This may be implemented using suitable power amplifiers 38 (one for each channel). Intermediate driver circuits 40 may be utilized to provide a suitable match between the impedance of the time delay adjustment circuit 34 and the power amplifiers 40.
[0035] If desired, one or more of the illustrated components may be implemented using a field programmable gate array (FPGA) circuit 42. In such an implementation, the ultrasonic oscillator, modulator and time delay functions are implemented using logic gates that are programmatically defined within the FPGA to perform the functions described above. While an FPGA circuit has been illustrated, the control hardware may be implemented using an FPGA, a microprocessor, a digital signal processor (DSP), or combinations thereof.
[0036] Referring to
[0037] The multichannel output from FPGA 42 is then fed to a multichannel digital to analog converter circuit 52, which converts each of the data streams into analog signals. These analog signals are then fed to the amplifiers 38 to drive the transducers.
[0038] As noted above, the ultrasonic beam can be modulated using a non-sinusoidal carrier, such as the pulse width modulated carrier depicted in
[0039] The output of the PWM controller circuit 60 may be fed to suitable gate driver circuits (one for each transducer 14), as needed to provide proper voltage and sufficient current to drive the power MOFET transistor switches 66. In the illustrated circuit, a pair of power MOSFET transistors is used for each transducer 14, operating in push-pull configuration to achieve higher power to the transducer. The circuit could also be implemented using N-channel FETs with no P-channel FETs.
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[0041] Several different spaced-apart transducer configuration patterns have been illustrated in
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[0043] In the case of the linear array shown in
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[0050] While the transducer spacings shown in
[0051] While at least one exemplary embodiment has been presented in the foregoing detailed description, it should be appreciated that a vast number of variations exist. It should also be appreciated that the exemplary embodiment or exemplary embodiments are only examples, and are not intended to limit the scope, applicability, or configuration of the invention in any way. Rather, the foregoing detailed description will provide those skilled in the art with a convenient road map for implementing an exemplary embodiment as contemplated herein. It should be understood that various changes may be made in the function and arrangement of elements described in an exemplary embodiment without departing from the scope of the invention as set forth in the appended claims.