RIC assembly with thuras tube
09807525 · 2017-10-31
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
H04R25/48
ELECTRICITY
H04R25/65
ELECTRICITY
H04R25/656
ELECTRICITY
International classification
Abstract
A hearing aid assembly comprising a receiver comprising a front chamber and a back chamber being acoustically coupled to respective front and back chamber openings, and acoustical guiding means for guiding air from at least one of the front and back chamber openings to an air mixing zone for mixing air from the front and back chamber openings. The mixing of air from the front and back chambers enhances the low-frequency response of the hearing aid assembly.
Claims
1. A hearing aid assembly comprising: a receiver comprising a front chamber and a back chamber being acoustically coupled to respective front and back chamber openings, and acoustical guiding means for guiding air from the back chamber opening to an air mixing zone for mixing air from the front and back chamber openings, the acoustical guiding means including a flexible tube having a predetermined length and a predetermined inner diameter, the air mixing zone being acoustically coupled to a sound outlet that includes a dome, the air mixing zone including an area behind the sound outlet dome, the sound outlet dome forming part of the boundaries of the air mixing zone, wherein the predetermined length and the predetermined inner diameter of the flexible tube are within the ranges 20-100 mm and 0.25-0.75 mm, respectively.
2. A hearing aid assembly according to claim 1, wherein the front chamber opening forms part of the air mixing zone.
3. A hearing aid assembly according to claim 1, wherein the predetermined acoustical properties comprises a low-pass filter characteristic.
4. A hearing aid assembly according to claim 1, further comprising at least one electrical connector adapted to connect the receiver to exterior electrical components of the hearing aid assembly.
5. A hearing aid assembly according to claim 4, wherein one or more electrical wires interconnecting the receiver and the at least one electrical connector are at least partly provided within the acoustical guiding means.
6. A hearing aid assembly according to claim 1, wherein the acoustical guiding means is coupled to the back chamber opening so as to guide air from the back chamber opening to the air mixing zone.
7. A hearing aid assembly according to claim 2, wherein the acoustical guiding means is coupled to the back chamber opening so as to guide air from the back chamber opening to the air mixing zone.
8. A hearing aid assembly according to claim 1, further comprising at least one electrical connector adapted to connect the receiver to exterior electrical components of the hearing aid assembly.
9. A hearing aid assembly according to claim 2, further comprising at least one electrical connector adapted to connect the receiver to exterior electrical components of the hearing aid assembly.
10. A hearing aid assembly according to claim 1, further comprising at least one electrical connector adapted to connect the receiver to exterior electrical components of the hearing aid assembly.
11. A hearing aid according to claim 1, wherein the air mixing zone is in direct acoustical contact with the dome of the sound outlet of the hearing aid assembly.
12. A hearing aid according to claim 11, wherein the dome forms parts of the boundaries of the air mixing zone.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The present invention will now be explained in further details with reference to the accompanying figures where
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(9) While the invention is susceptible to various modifications and alternative forms, specific embodiments have been shown by way of examples in the drawings and will be described in detail herein. It should be understood, however, that the invention is not intended to be limited to the particular forms disclosed. Rather, the invention is to cover all modifications, equivalents, and alternatives falling within the spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
(10) In its most general aspect the present invention relates to a hearing aid assembly, such as a RIC hearing aid assembly, where air from a receiver's back chamber is mixed with air from the receiver's front chamber. This mixing of air from the two chambers enhances the low-frequency response of the hearing air assembly significantly. An increase of around 6 dB in SPL may be achieved; or even more. Acoustical guiding means, such as a flexible tube, is provided for guiding air from the back chamber to a mixing zone in the form of a chamber where also air from the front chamber is present. The mixed air drives a sound outlet dome of the overall hearing aid assembly. The length and the diameter of the acoustical guiding means influence the low-frequency performance of the hearing aid assembly.
(11) Referring now to
(12) A tube section 211 is provided between the body 201 and the connector 209. This tube section 211 forms an acoustical channel where pressurized air from the back chamber opening 207 is allowed to enter and propagate. An additional tube section 212 and a passage 214 are provided for leading pressurized air to a mixing zone near the front chamber opening 206 so that air from the front and back chamber openings 206, 207 are mixing in order to enhance the low-frequency response of the hearing aid assembly 200. The air arriving from the back chamber opening 207 is in phase when it blends with air leaving the front chamber opening 206.
(13) When air from the back chamber opening 207 is guided to the mixing zone behind the sound outlet dome 202 the low-frequency performance of the assembly is highly improved in that the SPL in the low-frequency range, typically below 2 kHz, is increased significantly.
(14) The high-frequency performance of the hearing aid assembly is primarily dominated by sound escaping from the front chamber opening of the receiver. The tube sections 211, 212 act as a low-pass filter having a cut-off frequency of around 3 kHz. Thus, essentially no high-frequency components are allowed to pass through the tube sections 211, 212.
(15) Thus, it is advantageous that the increased low-frequency performance caused by the air from the back chamber opening does not influence the average high-frequency performance of the assembly in any particular way.
(16) The receiver 203 shown in
(17) A three-dimensional illustration of the RiC part of a hearing aid assembly is shown in
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(22) Another embodiment of the invention is shown in
(23) In such a distributed system the tweeter has a peak at around 5 kHz, instead at 3 kHz common for full range receivers which is desired as it approaches the natural resonance frequency associated with the human ear. To reduce the cross-over effects associated with the split of the frequency spectra of the respective receivers, the thuras tube can be optimised to provide an increase of the low part of the high-frequency spectrum, particularly at 3 kHz. Accordingly, the the full range output of the hearing aid shows an improvement due to the frequency performance increase at 3 kHz.