Flat plate transducer
10951966 ยท 2021-03-16
Inventors
Cpc classification
H04R1/025
ELECTRICITY
H04R2209/041
ELECTRICITY
H04R2209/026
ELECTRICITY
H04R2201/021
ELECTRICITY
International classification
Abstract
A flat plate audio transducer. A front panel and a back panel are connected via a frame. One or more electromagnetic actuators are mounted between the two panels. Voice coils are used as the actuators in some embodiments. Stiffening braces are preferably run between groups of actuators to prevent unwanted resonance phenomena. In some embodiments an actuator array moves both the front and back panels. In other embodiments only one panel is moved. The flat plate transducer is configured to mount on a room wall in a position that is conventionally used for decorative items such as artwork.
Claims
1. A sound transducer, comprising: (a) a front panel made of thin and stiff material, said front panel having a front panel perimeter; (b) a back panel made of thin and stiff material, said back panel having a back panel perimeter; (c) a frame joining said front panel perimeter to said back panel perimeter; (d) an actuator having a first side and second side, said actuator being configured to respond to a first electrical current by urging said first side away from said second side and a second electrical current by urging said first side toward said second side; (e) said first side of said actuator being attached to said front panel; and (f) said second side of said actuator being attached to said back panel.
2. The sound transducer as recited in claim 1, further comprising a hanger.
3. The sound transducer as recited in claim 2, further comprising a standoff.
4. The sound transducer as recited in claim 3, further comprising: (a) a front stiffening brace connected between said first side of said actuator and said front panel; and (b) a back stiffening brace connected between said second side of said actuator and said back panel.
5. The sound transducer as recited in claim 2, further comprising: (a) a front stiffening brace connected between said first side of said actuator and said front panel; and (b) a back stiffening brace connected between said second side of said actuator and said back panel.
6. The sound transducer as recited in claim 1, further comprising a plurality of additional actuators, wherein each of said plurality of actuators is attached to said front panel and said back panel.
7. The sound transducer as recited in claim 6, wherein said actuators are arranged in an evenly-spaced array.
8. The sound transducer as recited in claim 7, further comprising: (a) a first set of front stiffening braces connected between said actuators and said front panel; and (b) a second set of back stiffening braces connected between said actuators and said back panel.
9. The sound transducer as recited in claim 6, further comprising: (a) a front stiffening brace connected between said first side of said actuator and said front panel; and (b) a second set of back stiffening braces connected between actuators and said back panel.
10. The sound transducer as recited in claim 1, further comprising: (a) a front stiffening brace connected between said first side of said actuator and said front panel; and (b) a back stiffening brace connected between said second side of said actuator and said back panel.
11. A sound transducer, comprising: (a) a flexible front panel having a front panel perimeter; (b) a flexible back panel having a back panel perimeter; (c) a frame joining said front panel to said back panel, but leaving an open interior area; (d) an actuator having a first side and second side, said actuator being located in said open interior area, said actuator configured to respond to a first electrical current by urging said first side away from said second side and a second electrical current by urging said first side toward said second side; (e) said first side of said actuator being attached to said front panel; and (f) said second side of said actuator being attached to said back panel.
12. The sound transducer as recited in claim 11, further comprising a hanger.
13. The sound transducer as recited in claim 12, further comprising a standoff.
14. The sound transducer as recited in claim 13, further comprising: (a) a front stiffening brace connected between said first side of said actuator and said front panel; and (b) a back stiffening brace connected between said second side of said actuator and said back panel.
15. The sound transducer as recited in claim 12, further comprising: (a) a front stiffening brace connected between said first side of said actuator and said front panel; and (b) a back stiffening brace connected between said second side of said actuator and said back panel.
16. The sound transducer as recited in claim 11, further comprising a plurality of additional actuators, wherein each of said plurality of actuators is attached to said front panel and said back panel within said open interior area.
17. The sound transducer as recited in claim 16, wherein said actuators are arranged in an evenly-spaced array.
18. The sound transducer as recited in claim 17, further comprising: (a) a first set of front stiffening braces connected between said actuators and said front panel; and (b) a second set of back stiffening braces connected between said actuators and said back panel.
19. The sound transducer as recited in claim 16, further comprising: (a) a first set of front stiffening braces connected between said actuators and said front panel; and (b) a second set of back stiffening braces connected between said actuators and said back panel.
20. The sound transducer as recited in claim 11, further comprising: (a) a front stiffening brace connected between said first side of said actuator and said front panel; and (b) a back stiffening brace connected between said second side of said actuator and said back panel.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE SEVERAL VIEWS OF THE DRAWINGS
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REFERENCE NUMERALS IN THE DRAWINGS
(15) 20 speaker assembly
(16) 21 transducer assembly
(17) 24 coil assembly
(18) 26 cone
(19) 28 electrical terminals
(20) 30 chassis
(21) 32 enclosure
(22) 34 entrapped volume
(23) 36 bass port
(24) 40 frame
(25) 42 base
(26) 44 low frequency coil
(27) 46 high frequency coil
(28) 48 mounting bracket
(29) 50 mounting bracket
(30) 52 low frequency panel
(31) 54 channel
(32) 56 connecting surround
(33) 58 panel
(34) 60 transducer
(35) 62 second transducer
(36) 64 amplifier
(37) 66 distribution mode panel
(38) 68 flat panel loudspeaker
(39) 70 frame
(40) 72 back panel
(41) 74 hanger
(42) 76 standoff
(43) 78 electrical connections
(44) 80 stiffening brace
(45) 82 front panel
(46) 84 actuator
(47) 86 front longitudinal stiffening brace
(48) 88 back longitudinal stiffening brace
(49) 90 adhesive bond
(50) 92 adhesive bond
(51) 94 wiring
(52) 95 connector
(53) 96 magnet assembly
(54) 98 voice coil assembly
(55) 100 extension piece
(56) 102 electrical connectors
(57) 104 surround
(58) 106 front lateral stiffening brace
(59) 108 actuator location
(60) 110 flat panel loud speaker
(61) 112 room
(62) 114 wall
(63) 116 wall
(64) 118 wall
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
(65)
(66) The example of
(67) Back panel 72 is joined to front panel 82 by frame 70. The front and back panels each have a perimeter. In this example the frame runs around the perimeter of the assembly and does not extend very far into the interior (an open interior area is left). The panels themselves are preferably made of a thin and stiff material. Exemplary materials include FR-4 (glass-reinforced epoxy laminate), cotton paper saturated with phenolic resin, carbon fiber reinforced resin, and COROPLAST (corrugated plastic sheet).
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(70) In the region shown, two stiffening braces are present. Back longitudinal stiffening brace 88 is adhesively bonded to back panel 72. Likewise, front longitudinal stiffening brace 86 is adhesively bonded to front panel 82. The chassis of the actuator is bonded to brace 88 via adhesive bond 90. Voice coil assembly 98 is bonded to brace 86 by adhesive bond 92. (The voice coil includes an extension piece attached to the center of the moving cone as will be described in more detail subsequently).
(71) The actuators in this example essentially float between the two moving panels. The actuators areon averagemuch more dense that either stiffening braces 86, 88 or panels 72, 82. Whether actuated to push the panels apart or pull them together, the actuators tend to remain in a relatively stable position while the panels move outward or inward.
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(73) As discussed previously, a series of stiffening races are preferably added to the inner and outer panels to spread the forces applied by the transducers over a larger area. The invention is not limited to any particular construction methodology. However, in the example shown, the stiffening braces are bonded to the inward-facing side of panels 72, 82 before the panels are joined to the frame.
(74) In the embodiment shown, five front longitudinal stiffening braces 86 are bonded to front panel 82. Eighteen front lateral stiffening braces 106 are bonded in place in an orientation that is perpendicular to the longitudinal stiffening braces. Actuator locations 108 are shown as dashed lines.
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(76) Back panel 72 is prepared as an assembly with its stiffening braces bonded in place (analogous to the state shown for the front panel in
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(78) The invention is not limited to any particular overall side or number of actuators.
(79) The invention can be mounted in a variety of ways. It is possible, for example, to mount the invention in a floor stand. The preferred method, however, is to hang the invention on a wall in a manner similar to hanging a piece of artwork. In fact, artwork can be printed on front panel 82 so that the inventive loud speaker appears to be decorative rather than functional.
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(82) The materials used for the stiffening braces are preferably light and strong. In the embodiments using adhesive bonding the materials should also possess surfaces suitable for the adhesives being used. Wood works well for both the stiffening braces and the frame. It is also possible to use composite materials for these components. In looking at the assembly of
(83) In the preferred embodiments both the front panel and the back panel are moved by the transducers. It is also possible, however, to have one rigid panel and one moving panel. For the one-moving-panel embodiments the rigid panel must be stiffer so that it will not move. The versions using two moving panels have the advantage of twice the surface area acting to produce sound energy.
(84) The actuators used in the invention can be wired in series or in parallel (or combinations of the two), depending on the most advantageous arrangement for the circuitry used to drive them. The wiring used inside the inventive panel can be conventional wiring, flex circuits, printed circuit boards, or other components. In fact, the wiring for the actuators could be printed on one or more of the panels themselves. Contract pads could also be included on the actuators so that electrical connections are made to the actuators at the same time the mechanical connection is made.
(85) Having described in detail the mechanical construction of some of the embodiments of the invention, the invention's operational advantages will now be discussed. The inventive flat panel loud speaker incorporates a very large diaphragm relative to the enclosure's surface area and very small displacement actuators as compared to traditional loudspeakers. These features allow the inventive design to maximize the power delivered to the airforegoing the traditionally accepted speaker design goals of the enclosure volume and resonance. When one plots electrical impedance versus frequency with traditional speaker designs, a sharp impedance peak is observed at a particular frequency. When the diaphragm area is substantially increased with respect to the cabinet area (as for the present design), this peak is substantially reduced and the transfer of electrical energy to acoustic energy is improved.
(86) In the case of a loudspeaker, acoustic impedance matching maximizes power delivered to the air from the loudspeaker. Air ahs a very low impedance with respect to a traditional loudspeaker's moving diaphragm because the diaphragm has a relatively small surface area. The loss in efficiency is proportional to the wavelength of the sound produced relative to the size of the speaker's cone. Efficiency becomes quite poor at low frequencies because of the longer wavelengths involved.
(87) To match the source to the load, the source impedance needs to be made as low as possible. The specific acoustic impedance of free air is approximately 42 ohms per square centimeter. Impedance can be matched by using a large area loudspeaker diaphragm. In the present invention, most of the loudspeaker is diaphragm (most of the back and front panel areas) and very little is cabinet (frame 70 along with the stiffened region immediately adjacent to it). Essentially the present invention trades box volume for a better impedance match and thereby achieves much better efficiency in transferring electrical energy to sound energy. The enclosure used is also simplified and its weight is greatly reduced.
(88) Prior art woofers exhibit a smooth and flat frequency response in a near field measurement, but they also do not distribute the sound energy evenly in a room. Since they are essentially a low frequency point source, sound measurements taken throughout a room will show numerous peaks and valleys from reflections and standing waves. The present invention serves as both a sound reproducer and a low frequency sound absorber due to its large surface area and the reflective nature of low frequency sound reproduction in a room. The inventive transducer behaves more like a tuned bass trap at multiple frequenciesabsorbing reflections. The most effective placement will be along adjacent walls, as is shown in
(89) The inventive transducer also has a very large moving surface area compared to prior art woofers. The use of multiple inventive transducers on adjacent walls means that the sound energy from one transducer will be partially phase-cancelled by the adjacent transduceras opposed to being reflected. A large radiating area diaphragm becomes a point source to a much lower frequency. The result is that room resonance modes are diminished and the frequency response is improved and made more uniform across the listening area. This phenomenon eliminates the need for low frequency absorbers (conventionally used to flatten low frequency response).
(90) The reduced weight of the inventive transducer is largely the result of reduced cabinetry. A conventional woofer needs a large and rigid structure. In the inventive design the actuators float between two flexible surfaces. The flexible surfaces act as the diaphragm. The main mass of the actuators (magnet, pole piece, chassis) are largely stationary. There is no need for a rigid enclosure. The diaphragm movement on either side of the actuators creates a monopole with a large surface area. The electrical current needed to produce a given amount of force on the diaphragm is much lower than that required for a conventional woofer.
(91) Many other variations and combinations will occur to those skilled in the art. Examples include:
(92) 1. Elongated actuators can be used to reduce or even eliminate the need for stiffening braces.
(93) 2. The stiffening braces can be molded into the panel using conventional composite manufacturing techniques.
(94) 3. A recess or surrounding rib for locating the actuators can be molded into the panel using conventional composite manufacturing techniques.
(95) 4. Some or all of the assembly can be created using fasteners instead of adhesives.
(96) 5. Other conventional speakers can be combined with the inventive transducersuch as the additional of a small tweeter to the frame.
(97) The preceding description contains significant detail regarding the novel aspects of the present invention. They should not be construed, however, as limiting the scope of the invention but rather as providing illustrations of the preferred embodiments of the invention. Thus, the scope of the invention should be fixed by the following claims, rather than by the examples given.