Passive noise canceling device

10271994 ยท 2019-04-30

Assignee

Inventors

Cpc classification

International classification

Abstract

A device for use by a dental patient fits in the patient's ear and has at least one curved resonator tube to reduce the perceived volume of a dental drill. The device can have multiple layers of resonator tubes and a port into which recorded music can be played to calm the patient further.

Claims

1. An in-ear device for use by a dental patient to reduce a perceived volume of a dental drill comprising: (i) a first port for communication with the external auditory canal of said patient's ear; (ii) a vent for communication with an external environment; (iii) a first channel connecting said first port and said vent; and (iv) a number of layers disposed in parallel planes, said number of layers comprising: (a) a number of resonator tubes disposed in a plane having a first end and a second end, wherein said first end is proximate to and in communication with said first channel and said second end is closed, and wherein said resonator tubes are curved along at least part of their longitudinal axis in order to reduce the length of a straight line from said first end to said second end, and wherein said number of resonator tubes are configured to function as quarter-wave resonators to reduce said perceived volume of said dental drill.

2. The device of claim 1 wherein said plane is normal to the longitudinal axis of said first channel.

3. The device of claim 1 wherein said number of layers is at least three.

4. The device of claim 1 wherein said number of resonator tubes in each said layer is independently between three and five.

5. The device of claim 4 wherein said number of resonator tubes is the same in each said layer.

6. The device of claim 1 wherein each of said resonator tubes are curved.

7. The device of claim 1 wherein at least two of said number of said resonator tubes have the same length as each other.

8. The device of claim 7 wherein said number of said layers further comprises: (b) a plurality of pairs of resonant tubes of the same length.

9. The device of claim 1 wherein at least one of said resonator tubes has a spiral or helical configuration.

10. The device of claim 1 further comprising: (v) a second port into which sound can be played; and (vi) an audio communication route from said first port to said second port.

11. The device of claim 10 further comprising: (vii) a second channel connecting said second port to said first channel.

12. A method of reducing the perceived volume of a tool by utilizing a device wherein said device comprises: (i) a first port for communication with the external auditory canal of said patient's ear; (ii) a vent for communication with an external environment; (iii) a first channel connecting said first port and said vent; and (iv) a number of layers disposed in parallel planes, said number of layers comprising: (a) a number of resonator tubes disposed in a plane having a first end and a second end, wherein said first end is proximate to and in communication with said first channel and said second end is closed, and wherein said resonator tubes are curved along at least part of their longitudinal axis in order to reduce the length of a straight line from said first end to said second end, and wherein said number of resonator tubes function as quarter-wave resonators to reduce said perceived volume of said dental drill.

13. An in-ear device for use by a dental patient to reduce a perceived volume of a dental drill comprising: (i) a first port for communication with the external auditory canal of said patient's ear; (ii) a vent for communication with an external environment; (iii) a first channel connecting said first port and said vent; (iv) a second port into which sound can be played; (v) an audio communication route from said first port to said second port; and (vi) three layers disposed in parallel planes, said three layers comprising: (a) a set of resonator tubes disposed in a plane normal to the longitudinal axis of said first channel, each of said resonator tubes of said set having a first end and a second end, wherein said first end is proximate to and in communication with said first channel and said second end is closed, and wherein each of said resonator tubes of said set are curved along at least part of their longitudinal axis in order to reduce the length of a straight line from said first end to said second end, wherein each of said resonator tubes of said set are quarter-wave resonators, wherein each of said resonator tubes of said set have the same length, and wherein each of said resonator tubes of said set have a helical configuration.

14. The device of claim 13 wherein a music player is connected to said second port.

Description

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

(1) FIG. 1 shows a cross section through a noise cancellation device.

(2) FIG. 2 is an external 3D render of a device as shown in FIG. 1.

(3) FIG. 3 is a schematic render of a cross section through B-B in FIG. 1.

(4) FIG. 4 is an end view of an alternative device.

(5) FIG. 5 is a cross-sectional view through B-B in FIG. 4, showing a device with a single layer of resonator tubes.

(6) FIG. 6 is a cross-sectional view through B-B of an alternative device to that shown FIG. 4, showing a device with a double layer of resonator tubes.

(7) FIG. 7 is a graph of noise against frequency to demonstrate the noise-reducing effect of a 2-layer device compared to a 1-layer device.

(8) FIG. 8 is a graph of noise against frequency to demonstrate the noise-reducing effect of a device as shown in FIGS. 1 to 3 compared to a Comply foam plug.

DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS

(9) Turning to the figures, noise cancellation device 10 comprises cylindrical drum 30 of diameter 18.6 mm having cylindrical protrusion 20 of diameter 5.6 mm sharing a common longitudinal axis with and connected to drum 30 by curved shoulder 40. A channel is formed along the longitudinal axis of device 10 through drum 30 and protrusion 20 with the channel opening at vent 11 in the face of drum 30 and opening at port 12 in the face of protrusion 20. The internal diameter of this channel is about 3.00 mm at vent 11 and about 3.90 mm at port 12. It should be noted that noise cancellation device 10 is a laboratory model and is therefore larger in size than the envisaged production model of the device.

(10) A further vent, namely music vent 13 is formed in the external face of drum 30 offset from vent 11 towards the periphery of drum 30. Music vent 13 forms a chamber internally in device 10 and then connects via music channel 14 with port 12. The version number is molded at 16.

(11) Drum 30 also incorporates four layers 50 of resonator tubes 15, with five tubes 15 in each layer 50. In some embodiments three layers 50 are used. As can be seen from FIG. 3, resonator tubes 15 are in a spiral configuration with vent 11 at the center of each spiral and perpendicular to the plane of each layer 50. The resonator tubes are 1.6 mm or 2.00 mm wide by 1.15 mm deep and range in length from 8.5 mm to 19 mm.

(12) Noise cancellation device 10 is used as follows:

(13) Protrusion 20 is carefully fitted into the patient's external auditory canal so that port 12 aligns with the canal. It will be appreciated that shoulder 40 and drum 30 are shaped so as to prevent, or at least reduce the chance of, device 10 being pushed too far into the patient's canal and inadvertently causing damage.

(14) External noise (such as the noise of a dentist's drill) passing through vent 11 has to pass through layers 50 of resonator tube 15 before exiting the device at port 12 and passing into the patient's ear canal. Layers 50 of resonator tubes 15 act as quarter-wave resonators and filter out the frequencies of the drill. At the same time, they act as the low-pass filter to enable speech frequencies to pass through to the patient's ear, which means that the patient can still hear the dentist speaking.

(15) If desired, the output from a personal musical player (such as an MP3 Player) can be fitted to music vent 13 in which case musical sound produced by this device bypasses the resonator tubes 15 via music channel 14 to pass through ports 12 into the patient's ear canal without being attenuated by device 10. Thus, the patient can listen to music while having the sound of the drill blocked out.

Example 1

(16) Two devices were tested which were identical apart from the number of layers of resonator tubes. Device 50 shown in FIG. 5 had a single layer 55 5 mm wide of five resonator tubes and device 60, shown in FIG. 6, had a double layer 65 of five resonator tubes in each layer (each layer being 2.4 mm wide so that it fits in the same space as the single layer of FIG. 5). Both devices looked identical from the end view, as shown in FIG. 4.

(17) The devices did not have a separate music vent or channel. Music could be played through the central vent 51, 61 along with the ambient sound.

(18) Experimental Procedure

(19) (a) Each device was fitted with a fir tree seal (also known as a polybud and easily available from, for example, Canford Audio pic in the UK) and earphone (see FIG. 4).

(20) (b) The device was located in a GRAS Ear and Cheek Simulator Type 43AG (ECS).

(21) (c) White noise was played through a loudspeaker placed 150 mm from the device.

(22) (d) The sound reaching the ECS microphone was recorded on a lab computer.

(23) (e) The white noise was also recorded without a device in the ECS.

(24) (f) The sound recordings with and without devices were then plotted as sound pressure level against frequency using MATLAB (see FIG. 7).

(25) FIG. 7 shows the greater noise reduction effect achieved with a 2-layer device (v16x) compared to a 1-layer device (v15x), particularly over 2.5 kHz. The 2-layer device reduces the white noise recorded with no device to a lower level than the 1-layer device (v15x).

Example 2

(26) The noise-reducing effect of a three layer device as shown in FIGS. 1-3 was compared to a Comply foam plug (marketed by Hearing Components, Inc. of Oakdale, Minn., US) by using the same experimental procedure as in Example 1 above. The results are shown in FIG. 8.

(27) It can be seen that the device is more effective than the foam plug at reducing noise in the frequency range 4-10 kHz but leaves the (0-3.5 kHz) virtually unaffected.

(28) All optional and preferred features and modifications of the described embodiments and dependent claims are usable in all aspects of the invention taught herein. Furthermore, the individual features of the dependent claims, as well as all optional and preferred features and modifications of the described embodiments are combinable and interchangeable with one another.

(29) While particular elements, embodiments and applications of the present invention have been shown and described, it will be understood, that the invention is not limited thereto since modifications can be made by those skilled in the art without departing from the scope of the present disclosure, particularly in light of the foregoing teachings.