Headset Porting
20170374449 ยท 2017-12-28
Inventors
- Roman Sapiejewski (Boston, MA, US)
- Robert Belanger (Franklin, MA, US)
- Tristan Edward Taylor (Boston, MA, US)
Cpc classification
G10K2210/3214
PHYSICS
G10K11/178
PHYSICS
H04R2201/105
ELECTRICITY
G10K2210/1081
PHYSICS
H04R1/2823
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H04R1/10
ELECTRICITY
G10K11/178
PHYSICS
Abstract
A headset cup having a front cavity and a rear cavity separated by a driver, with a mass port tube connected to the rear port to present a reactive acoustic impedance to the rear cavity, in parallel with a resistive port, the total acoustic response of the rear cavity remaining linear at high power levels. In some embodiments, the mass port tube is made of metal, while the headset cup is otherwise made of plastic.
Claims
1.-25. (canceled)
26. An around-the-ear headset cup comprising: a front cavity; a rear cavity; a driver disposed between the front cavity and the rear cavity, the driver configured to radiate sound pressure levels larger than 120 dB; and a first port connected to the rear cavity, the first port being configured such that a resistive component of an acoustic impedance of the first port is larger than a reactive component of the acoustic impedance of the first port; and a second port connected to the rear cavity such that an acoustic impedance of the second port is parallel to the acoustic impedance of the first port, the second port being configured such that, at frequencies less than 100 Hz, a reactive component of the acoustic impedance of the second port is larger than a resistive component of the acoustic impedance of the second port.
27. The headset cup of claim 26, wherein the driver is configured to radiate sound pressure levels larger than 135 dB.
28. The headset cup of claim 26, wherein the second port comprises a tube about 37 mm long.
29. The headset cup of claim 28, wherein the tube has a cross-sectional area of about 9 mm.sup.2
30. The headset cup of claim 26, wherein the second port comprises a tube having a length-to-inside diameter ratio of about 10:1.
31. The headset cup of claim 26, wherein the rear cavity is constructed from plastic and the second port comprises a metal tube.
32. The headset cup of claim 31, wherein the metal tube is a stainless steel tube.
33. The headset cup of claim 26, wherein the first port includes a resistive screen.
34. The headset cup of claim 26, wherein the second port extends outside the rear cavity.
35. The headset cup of claim 26, wherein the second port comprises a metal tube seated inside a wall of the rear cavity.
36. The headset cup of claim 26, wherein a ratio of a volume enclosed by the rear cavity to a volume enclosed by the second port is in the range 27:1-40:1, the volume enclosed by the rear cavity not including the volume enclosed by the second port.
37. The headset cup of claim 26, further comprising an active noise reduction circuit coupled to the driver.
38. A headset comprising, at least one around-the-ear cup having a front cavity and rear cavity; a driver configured to radiate sound pressure levels larger than 120 dB, the driver disposed between said front and rear cavities, wherein the ear cup comprises: a first port connected to the rear cavity, the first port being configured such that a resistive component of an acoustic impedance of the first port is larger than a reactive component of the acoustic impedance of the first port, and a second port comprising a tube having an inside surface that is substantially smooth, the second port connected to the rear cavity such that an acoustic impedance of the second port is parallel to the acoustic impedance of the first port, the second port being configured such that, at frequencies less than 100 Hz, a reactive component of the acoustic impedance of the second port is larger than a resistive component of the acoustic impedance of the second port; and an active noise reduction system coupled to the driver.
39. The headset of claim 38, wherein the tube has a length-to-inside diameter ratio of about 10:1.
40. The headset of claim 38, wherein the rear cavity is constructed from plastic and the tube is a metal tube.
41. The headset of claim 38, wherein a ratio of a volume enclosed by the rear cavity to a volume enclosed by the second port is in the range 27:1-40:1, the volume enclosed by the rear cavity not including the volume enclosed by the second port.
42. An apparatus comprising: a first around-the-ear cup shell of a headphone; a second around-the-ear cup shell of the headphone; an electroacoustic driver configured to radiate sound pressure levels larger than 120 dB, the electroacoustic driver disposed between the first and second around-the-ear cup shells, such that the first around-the-ear cup shell and a first face of the driver define a front cavity, and the second around-the-ear cup shell and a second face of the driver define a rear cavity; a metal tube having an internal bore with substantially uniform cross section, the metal tube seated in the second ear cup shell and coupling the rear cavity to space around the apparatus, the metal tube configured such that, at frequencies less than 100 Hz, a reactive component of the acoustic impedance of the metal tube is larger than a resistive component of the acoustic impedance of the metal tube wherein the second around-the-ear cup shell comprises plastic, and the metal tube comprises a rough exterior surface at one end, the rough exterior surface being anchored in the plastic of the second around-the-ear cup shell.
43. The apparatus of claim 42, wherein the metal tube has a length-to-inside diameter ratio of about 10:1.
44. The apparatus of claim 42, wherein a ratio of a volume enclosed by the rear cavity to a volume enclosed by the metal tube is in the range 27:1-40:1, the volume enclosed by the rear cavity not including the volume enclosed by the metal tube.
45. The apparatus of claim 42, wherein the metal tube is a stainless steel tube.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING
[0005]
[0006]
[0007]
[0008]
[0009]
[0010]
[0011]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0012] With reference now to the drawing and more particularly
[0013] Both ports present an impedance to air flow that has a resistive and a reactive component. The resistive port 14 is of negligible length, so that the impedance of the port is dominated by the resistance of the port screen. The mass port 16 is significantly longer than it is wide, such that its impedance is dominated by its reactance, which depends on the acoustic mass of the volume of air inside the tube. The impedance of the mass port 16 varies with the frequency of the sound pressure in the rear cavity 13 that is causing air flow through them. In particular, as frequencies decrease, the contribution to total impedance from the reactive component of the mass port decreases, allowing the impedance to be dominated by the resistive component of the mass port's impedance at lower frequencies, which is relatively constant with frequency. The resistive component, however, varies with the sound pressure level inside the cavity, and this variable impedance results in the response being non-linear with pressure at frequencies where the resistive component dominates.
[0014] Non-linearity, i.e., impedance increasing with sound pressure levels, in the response of the acoustic system limits the output levels at which an ANR circuit can be operatedhigher impedance requires more force to move the air, which requires more current through the motor of the transducer, potentially exceeding the capacity of the transducer or amplifier.
[0015] To address this problem, according to the present invention, the mass port is modified, relative to prior designs, to decrease the resistive component of its impedance, extending the frequency range in which the reactive portion dominates and in which the total impedance as a function of frequency is essentially linear. The resistance is decreased by increasing the diameter of the mass port 16. Increasing the diameter alone decreases the effective acoustic mass of the port, so to maintain the original reactance, the length of the mass port is also increased. Increasing the length has more effect on the acoustic mass than it does on the resistance, so this does not undermine the benefits of increasing the diameter. In one example, the cross-sectional area of the port tube is increased from 2.25 mm.sup.2 in conventional headsets to 9.1 mm.sup.2. To maintain the reactance, the length is increased from 10 mm to 37 mm (end-effects result in the effective length being slightly longer, an effect which increases with diameter). That is, a 4 increase in area is matched by a 4 increase in length.
[0016] The resistive port 14 in parallel to the mass port 16 also provides a resistive impedance, and it is desirable that the two impedances, resistive and reactive, remain parallel, rather than in series. The purely resistive port improves performance at some frequencies (where a back cavity with only a purely reactive port would have port resonance, significantly cutting output power), while compromising performance at others. Providing this resistance in a controlled, purely resistive port while the reactive port has as little resistance as possible allows that compromise to be managed and its benefits realized to the best advantage of the total system.
[0017] Thus, the performance of a headset for use in high-noise environments is improved by extending the operating frequency range at which the acoustic impedance of a mass port from the back cavity to ambient as a function of frequency is purely reactive, such that the total back cavity response remains effectively linear with respect to sound pressure levels. This is accomplished by increasing both the diameter and length of the port, but actually manufacturing such a port presents additional difficulty. As noted, the port in the example is 37 mm long, and has a cross-sectional area of 9.1 mm.sup.2, or a diameter of 3.4 mm, for a roughly 10 aspect ratio of length to diameter. Another way to consider the size of the mass port is that the volume of air inside the tube is 337 mm.sup.3, while the volume of the rear cavity (not including the volume occupied by the tube itself) is 11,100 mm.sup.3, giving a ratio of rear cavity volume to mass port volume of about 33:1. A conventional mass port would have a significantly smaller volume, and thus a significantly larger ratio of rear cavity volume to mass port volume. For example, for the conventional mass port described above with an area of 2.25 mm.sup.2 and a length of 10 mm, the volume is 22.5 mm.sup.3, and the ratio, in the same size rear cavity, is 493:1. Applying a ten percent tolerance to port volume and cavity volume, the ratio of the present design may vary from around 27:1 to 40:1, while the ratio using the prior port size may vary from around 400:1 to 600:1. The applicant has also found that it is preferable for the port to be of uniform cross-section, to provide consistency in response from unit to unit. It is also preferable for the port to be smooth inside, to avoid causing turbulence, which could reintroduce a resistive component to the response. Providing a long, skinny tube of uniform cross-section and free of internal projections can be prohibitively difficult in the ABS plastic conventionally used for forming the shells 12A and 13A of the headset. Molding a tube with such a long draw could not be done with uniform cross section, and assembling a port from multiple pieces would introduce rough edges, as well as potential assembly variation.
[0018] To resolve this, in the embodiment shown in
[0019] The exploded view of
[0020] Referring to
[0021] Referring to
[0022] Referring to
[0023] The headset cup of
[0024] Referring to
[0025] Power amplifier 32 amplifies the signal from compensator 31A and energizes headphone driver 17 to provide an acoustical signal in cavity 12 that is combined with an outside noise signal that enters cavity 12 from a region represented as acoustical input terminal 25 to produce a combined acoustic pressure signal in cavity 12 represented as a circle 36 to provide a combined acoustic pressure signal applied to and transduced by microphone 18. Microphone amplifier 35 amplifies the transduced signal and delivers it to signal combiner 30.
[0026] There has been described a ported headset characterized by a port having a linear acoustic impedance at high sound levels to allow improved noise reduction in a very noisy environment where the sound level may be greater than 120 dB SPL between 60 and 100 Hz. It is evident that those skilled in the art may now make numerous uses and modifications of and departures from the specific apparatus and techniques herein disclosed without departing from the inventive concepts. Consequently, the invention is to be construed as embracing each and every novel feature and novel combination of features present in or possessed by the apparatus and techniques herein disclosed and limited solely by the spirited scope of the appended claims.