ACOUSTICALLY SUMMED REFERENCE MICROPHONE FOR ACTIVE NOISE CONTROL
20180091883 ยท 2018-03-29
Inventors
Cpc classification
G10K11/178
PHYSICS
H04R2460/11
ELECTRICITY
G10K2210/1081
PHYSICS
International classification
H04R1/10
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
A headphone including a circumaural or supra-aural ear cup having an ear cup housing wall which forms an interior chamber within the ear cup. A transducer is positioned within the interior chamber for producing an acoustic output to a user and an active noise control assembly positioned within the interior chamber. The active noise control assembly including a reference microphone, the reference microphone is acoustically coupled to a plurality of reference input ports spaced around the ear cup housing wall such that a sound input from each of the different spacial locations around the ear cup housing wall is received by the reference microphone and acoustically summed to provide a reference audio signal indicative of the sound input at the different spacial locations. The headphone further including a processing circuit operable to generate an anti-noise signal from the reference audio signal.
Claims
1. A headphone comprising: a circumaural or supra-aural ear cup having an ear cup housing wall which forms an interior chamber within the ear cup; a transducer positioned within the interior chamber for producing an acoustic output to a user; an active noise control assembly positioned within the interior chamber, the active noise control assembly comprising a reference microphone, wherein the reference microphone is acoustically coupled to a plurality of reference input ports, the plurality of reference input ports are arranged at different spacial locations around the ear cup housing wall and each face a direction that is perpendicular to a direction faced by a sound pick-up surface of the reference microphone, and wherein a sound input from each of the different spacial locations around the ear cup housing wall is received by the reference microphone and acoustically summed to provide a reference audio signal indicative of the sound input at the different spacial locations; and a processing circuit operable to generate an anti-noise signal from the reference audio signal for countering effects of unwanted ambient sounds in the acoustic output of the transducer.
2. The headphone of claim 1 wherein the reference input ports are open to an ambient environment outside of the ear cup housing wall.
3. The headphone of claim 1 wherein a space between each of the reference input ports arranged around the ear cup housing wall is the same.
4. The headphone of claim 1 wherein the reference microphone is directly connected to the plurality of reference input ports by a plurality of acoustic input pathways having portions extending in different directions from the reference microphone.
5. The headphone of claim 4 wherein the different directions are in a radial direction extending from a side of the reference microphone to the earcup housing wall, and the plurality of acoustic input pathways comprise substantially the same length.
6. The headphone of claim 1 wherein the reference audio signal is substantially equivalent to an electrical summation produced using a plurality of microphones at the different spacial locations around the ear cup housing wall.
7. The headphone of claim 1 wherein the reference microphone is an omnidirectional microphone.
8. The headphone of claim 1 wherein the sound input from each of the different spacial locations is received by the sound pick-up surface within the reference microphone.
9. A noise cancelling headphone comprising: an ear cup formed by an ear cup housing wall, the ear cup housing wall having an exterior surface to an ambient environment outside of the ear cup and an interior surface defining an interior chamber; a transducer positioned within the interior chamber for producing an acoustic output to a user; and an active noise control assembly positioned within the interior chamber, the active noise control assembly comprising a reference microphone module, the reference microphone module having a module wall that, in combination with the interior surface of the earcup housing wall, forms a first acoustic input pathway and a second acoustic input pathway, the first acoustic input pathway extending in a first radial direction from a reference microphone mounted to the module wall to the exterior surface of the ear cup housing wall and the second acoustic input pathway extending in a second radial direction from the reference microphone to the exterior surface of the ear cup housing wall, wherein the first radial direction and the second radial direction are different such that the reference microphone receives an omnidirectional acoustic input that is acoustically summed at the reference microphone.
10. The headphone of claim 9 wherein the first radial direction and the second radial direction are perpendicular to a direction faced by a sound pick-up surface of the reference microphone, and the first acoustic input pathway and the second acoustic input pathway are acoustically coupled to the sound pick-up surface within the reference microphone.
11. The headphone of claim 9 wherein the first acoustic input pathway and the second acoustic input pathway are acoustically coupled to a first input port and a second input port, respectively, formed through the ear cup housing wall at different spacial locations along the ear cup housing wall and radially outward to the reference microphone.
12. The headphone of claim 9 further comprising: a third acoustic input pathway extending in a third direction from the reference microphone to the exterior surface of the ear cup housing wall, wherein the third direction is different from the first direction and the second direction.
13. The headphone of claim 12 wherein the third acoustic input pathway is acoustically coupled to a third input port formed through the ear cup housing wall, and wherein a first input port associated with the first acoustic input pathway, a second input port associated with the second acoustic input pathway and the third input port are at substantially evenly spaced locations around the ear cup housing wall.
14. A reference microphone assembly for an active noise control system, the microphone assembly comprising: a housing having a first acoustic input pathway and a second acoustic input pathway, wherein the first acoustic input pathway is configured to receive a first sound input from a first direction and the second acoustic input pathway is configured to receive a second sound input from a second direction different than the first direction; and a reference microphone mounted to the housing, the reference microphone is acoustically coupled to the first acoustic input pathway and the second acoustic input pathway and comprises a sound pick-up surface that faces a direction different than the first direction and the second direction and receives the first sound input and the second sound input, and wherein the first sound input and the second sound input are acoustically summed at the reference microphone.
15. The microphone assembly of claim 14 wherein a sound input port to the first acoustic input pathway faces a different direction than a sound input port to the second acoustic input pathway.
16. The microphone assembly of claim 14 wherein the first acoustic input pathway and the second acoustic input pathway are connected at one end to the reference microphone, and at another end to different sound input ports in a headphone ear cup housing wall.
17. The microphone assembly of claim 14 wherein the housing is coupled to an interior surface of an ear cup housing wall of a headphone, and wherein the first acoustic input pathway is acoustically coupled to a first sound input port formed through the ear cup housing wall and the second acoustic input pathway is acoustically coupled to a second sound input port formed through the ear cup housing wall.
18. The microphone assembly of claim 14 wherein the first acoustic input pathway and the second acoustic input pathway are substantially the same length.
19. The microphone assembly of claim 14 further comprising: a third acoustic input pathway configured to receive a third sound input from a third direction, wherein the third direction is different than the first direction and the second direction.
20. The microphone assembly of claim 14 wherein the reference microphone is operable to generate a reference audio signal indicative of the acoustically summed sound input for use in an active noise control system.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0008] The embodiments are illustrated by way of example and not by way of limitation in the figures of the accompanying drawings in which like references indicate similar elements. It should be noted that references to an or one embodiment in this disclosure are not necessarily to the same embodiment, and they mean at least one.
[0009]
[0010]
[0011]
[0012]
[0013]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0014] In this section we shall explain several preferred embodiments of this invention with reference to the appended drawings. Whenever the shapes, relative positions and other aspects of the parts described in the embodiments are not clearly defined, the scope of the invention is not limited only to the parts shown, which are meant merely for the purpose of illustration. Also, while numerous details are set forth, it is understood that some embodiments of the invention may be practiced without these details. In other instances, well-known structures and techniques have not been shown in detail so as not to obscure the understanding of this description.
[0015]
[0016] More specifically, reference microphone 104 may sample sounds, or otherwise pick up a sound reference signal, indicative of sound pressures at multiple locations around housing 102 and provide an acoustic summation of those sounds for use by the ANC system. Representatively, housing 102 may include a number of acoustic pathways 106A, 106B and 106C extending from reference microphone 104 to a number of acoustic input ports 108A, 108B and 108C formed through an exterior surface of housing 102. In one embodiment, acoustic input ports 108A-108C may be open to an ambient environment outside of housing 102 such that they can be used to detect unwanted ambient sounds (e.g., noise). Acoustic input ports 108A-108C may further be positioned at different spacial locations around housing 102 such that sounds S.sub.1, S.sub.2 and S.sub.3 at these different locations can be sampled by reference microphone 104. For example, acoustic input ports 108A-108C could be at locations around housing 102 where three reference microphones would be positioned in a multiple reference microphone ANC system. Representatively, in one embodiment, acoustic input ports 108A-108C may be evenly spaced around an exterior surface of housing 102. Other configurations, however, are also contemplated. For example, acoustic input ports 108A-108C may be at different locations around housing 102 but unevenly spaced, or depending upon a shape of housing 102, along different sides of housing 102.
[0017] In addition, in some embodiments, each of acoustic input ports 108A-108C may face different directions such that they can pick up omnidirectional sounds S.sub.1-S.sub.3 (e.g., sounds traveling in different directions as illustrated by the arrows). For example, each of sounds S.sub.1-S.sub.3 may originate from sound sources at different locations around housing 102, and therefore travel toward housing 102 in different directions. Since each of acoustic input ports 108A-108C face the direction of the respective sound sources, they can more directly pick up sounds S.sub.1-S.sub.3 from these sources. In this aspect, reference microphone 104 may also be referred to as an omnidirectional microphone in that it can pick up sounds coming from various directions. It should further be understood that, in some embodiments, the direction in which sounds S.sub.1-S.sub.3 travel is toward a side of reference microphone 104, as opposed toward an acoustic pick-up surface (e.g., diaphragm) of reference microphone 104. Acoustic input ports 108A-108C may have any size and shape suitable for picking up sounds S.sub.1-S.sub.3. In addition, although three acoustic input ports 108A-108C are illustrated, it is contemplated that any number of acoustic input ports 108A-108C may be used, for example, housing 102 may have at least two or more acoustic input ports.
[0018] In addition, in some embodiments, a damping member may be associated with one or more of acoustic input ports 108A-108C and/or acoustic input pathways 106A-106C to address possible resonances in the pathways. Representatively, in one embodiment, damping members 110A, 110E and 110C are positioned over each of acoustic input ports 108A, 108B and 108C, respectively. In this aspect, damping members 110A-110C may be made of an acoustic mesh sufficient to achieve damping at higher frequencies without interfering with ANC operations (e.g., frequencies less than 3 kHz). In other embodiments, the damping members may be made of a porous material such as a cloth or foam that is positioned inside of each of acoustic input pathways 106A-106C. For example, the porous cloth or foam material may completely fill each of acoustic input pathways 106A-106C to completely eliminate all resonances.
[0019] As previously discussed, acoustic input pathways 106A-106C may extend from reference microphone 104 to each of acoustic input ports 108A-108C, respectively. In this aspect, sounds S.sub.1-S.sub.3 entering acoustic input ports 108A-108C travel through acoustic input pathways 106A-106C to reference microphone 104. In some embodiments, each of acoustic input pathways 106A-106C may have an acoustic length L.sub.1, L.sub.2, and L.sub.3, respectively. In other words, acoustic input pathways 106A-106C are not simply holes, but rather pathways having a defined acoustic length along which sound must travel to reach reference microphone 104. Each of acoustic lengths L.sub.1-L.sub.3 may be acoustically the same. It is contemplated, however, that in some embodiments where it is known that certain sounds sources are closer/farther than others, one or more of acoustic lengths L.sub.1-L.sub.3 of acoustic input pathways 106A-106C may be different to accommodate these sound sources at known locations (e.g., an acoustic input pathway aligned with a closer sound source may be shorter the others). In addition, as shown in
[0020] The sounds S.sub.1-S.sub.3 input to reference microphone 104 from the different spacial locations around housing 102 as previously discussed can then be combined at the sound pick-up surface (e.g., diaphragm) within microphone 104 and acoustically summed to produce a reference signal indicative of sounds (e.g., unwanted background noises) sampled from multiple locations for ANC. Reference microphone assembly 100 therefore allows for a more spacially robust reference signal for ANC than that which is typically achieved using a single reference microphone (which samples sound from a single location), without the need for multiple reference microphones. It should further be understood that reference microphone 104 with multiple input pathways for multi-sound input as disclosed herein is operable within a desired frequency range for ANC (e.g., up to about 2 kHz).
[0021]
[0022]
[0023] A transducer or driver 316 for outputting a music signal (S) in a direction of ear 312 may be mounted within mid wall 314. Driver 316 may be any type of electric-to-acoustic transducer having a pressure sensitive diaphragm and circuitry configured to produce a sound in response to an electrical audio signal input (e.g., a loudspeaker). The electrical audio signal may be a music signal input to driver 316 by sound source 330. Sound source 330 may be any type of audio device capable of outputting an audio signal, for example, an audio electronic device such as a portable music player, home stereo system or home theater system capable of outputting an audio signal.
[0024] In order to improve an acoustic performance of ear cup 300, an ANC assembly including reference microphone assembly 100 may be positioned within ear cup 300. The ANC assembly may include any type of active noise cancelling system capable of emitting a cancelling or anti-noise signal for cancelling noise within ear cup 300. For example, active noise control assembly may be a feedback and/or feedforward ANC system. Representatively, in one embodiment, the ANC assembly may include reference microphone assembly 100 including reference microphone 104 for detecting unwanted background sounds and an error microphone 326 for detecting sounds within ear chamber 306. As shown in
[0025] Similar to reference microphone 104, error microphone 326 may be any type of acoustic-to-electric transducer or sensor having a pressure sensitive diaphragm and circuitry capable of converting ear cup sounds into an electrical signal (e.g., a MEMS microphone). Error microphone 326 may mounted within ear chamber 306 so that it can detect sounds that could be heard by a user and interfere with the listening experience. The ear cup sounds detected by error microphone 326 may then be converted to an ear cup noise electrical signal and transmitted to processing unit 328. Processing unit 328 may then process both the ear cup noise electrical signal and the reference signal from reference microphone 104 to determine whether ANC is necessary. Where ANC is necessary, processing unit 328 will generate a cancelling or anti-noise signal having an amplitude equal to, but of a different phase than, the ear cup sounds to be cancelled. The cancelling signal will then be transmitted from processing unit 328 to driver 316, which in turn, outputs the cancelling signal to ear chamber 306 so that any undesired ear cup sound is cancelled before reaching the user's ear. The cancelling signal may be transmitted along with, or separate from, a music signal (S) transmitted to driver 316 by sound source 330 for output to the user.
[0026]
[0027] Although not illustrated in
[0028]
[0029] Electronic device 500 can include, for example, power supply 502, storage 504, signal processor 506, memory 508, processor 510, communication circuitry 512, and input/output circuitry 514. In some embodiments, electronic device 500 can include more than one of each component of circuitry, but for the sake of simplicity, only one of each is shown in
[0030] Power supply 502 can provide power to the components of electronic device 500. In some embodiments, power supply 502 can be coupled to a power grid such as, for example, a wall outlet. In some embodiments, power supply 502 can include one or more batteries for providing power to an ear cup, headphone or other type of electronic device associated with the headphone. As another example, power supply 502 can be configured to generate power from a natural source (e.g., solar power using solar cells).
[0031] Storage 504 can include, for example, a hard-drive, flash memory, cache, ROM, and/or RAM. Additionally, storage 504 can be local to and/or remote from electronic device 500. For example, storage 504 can include integrated storage medium, removable storage medium, storage space on a remote server, wireless storage medium, or any combination thereof. Furthermore, storage 504 can store data such as, for example, system data, user profile data, and any other relevant data.
[0032] Signal processor 506 can be, for example a digital signal processor, used for real-time processing of digital signals that are converted from analog signals by, for example, input/output circuitry 514. After processing of the digital signals has been completed, the digital signals could then be converted back into analog signals. For example, the signal processor 506 could be used to analyze digitized audio signals received from reference or error microphones to determine how much of the audio signal is ambient noise or ear cup noise and how much of the audio signal is, for example, music signals.
[0033] Memory 508 can include any form of temporary memory such as RAM, buffers, and/or cache. Memory 508 can also be used for storing data used to operate electronic device applications (e.g., operation system instructions).
[0034] In addition to signal processor 506, electronic device 500 can additionally contain general processor 510. Processor 510 can be capable of interpreting system instructions and processing data. For example, processor 510 can be capable of executing instructions or programs such as system applications, firmware applications, and/or any other application. Additionally, processor 510 has the capability to execute instructions in order to communicate with any or all of the components of electronic device 500. For example, processor 510 can execute instructions stored in memory 508 to enable or disable ANC.
[0035] Communication circuitry 512 may be any suitable communications circuitry operative to initiate a communications request, connect to a communications network, and/or to transmit communications data to one or more servers or devices within the communications network. For example, communications circuitry 512 may support one or more of Wi-Fi (e.g., a 802.11 protocol), Bluetooth, high frequency systems, infrared, GSM, GSM plus EDGE, CDMA, or any other communication protocol and/or any combination thereof.
[0036] Input/output circuitry 514 can convert (and encode/decode, if necessary) analog signals and other signals (e.g., physical contact inputs, physical movements, analog audio signals, etc.) into digital data. Input/output circuitry 514 can also convert digital data into any other type of signal. The digital data can be provided to and received from processor 510, storage 504, memory 508, signal processor 506, or any other component of electronic device 500. Input/output circuitry 514 can be used to interface with any suitable input or output devices, such as, for example, reference microphone 104, error microphone 326 or sound source 330 of
[0037] Lastly, bus 516 can provide a data transfer path for transferring data to, from, or between processor 510, storage 504, memory 508, communications circuitry 512, and any other component included in electronic device 500. Although bus 516 is illustrated as a single component in
[0038] While certain embodiments have been described and shown in the accompanying drawings, it is to be understood that such embodiments are merely illustrative of and not restrictive on the broad invention, and that the invention is not limited to the specific constructions and arrangements shown and described, since various other modifications may occur to those of ordinary skill in the art. For example, the ANC system including reference microphone as described herein may be used to improve an acoustic response of any type of earpiece with acoustic capabilities, for example, earbuds, earphones, intra-canal earphones, intra-concha earphones or a mobile phone headset. The description is thus to be regarded as illustrative instead of limiting.