Information
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Patent Grant
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6408080
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Patent Number
6,408,080
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Date Filed
Monday, November 29, 199925 years ago
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Date Issued
Tuesday, June 18, 200222 years ago
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Inventors
-
Original Assignees
-
Examiners
Agents
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CPC
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US Classifications
Field of Search
US
- 381 160
- 381 161
- 381 355
- 381 356
- 381 357
- 381 358
- 381 360
- 381 361
- 381 369
- 381 FOR 147
- 381 FOR 148
- 181 171
- 181 187
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International Classifications
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Abstract
A microphone may use boundary layer technology in concert with a concave reflector to produce improved sensitivity. The concave reflector may be arranged with respect to a boundary layer creating surface such that the sound waves are concentrated at the boundary layer creating surface. Thus, an intense compression layer is formed proximate to the boundary layer creating surface. A transducer may arranged in opposition to the boundary layer creating surface to convert the boundary layer energy into an electrical signal.
Description
BACKGROUND
This invention relates generally to microphones and particularly to boundary layer or pressure zone microphones.
A boundary layer or pressure zone microphone is a microphone which is situated proximate to a boundary layer or pressure zone created by a reflecting surface. Sound waves create a high pressure region directly in front of a sound reflecting surface. The incident and reflected waves from a reflecting surface are superimposed in the same phase. Thus, the pressure in front of the surface may be twice as high as in the free sound field. This effect is utilized in so-called boundary layer or pressure zone microphones. In one embodiment of such microphones, an electrical transducer is mounted on a flat, reflecting surface. The increased acoustic pressure is then detected by the microphone in the region proximate to the reflecting surface.
The pressure zone or zone of increased pressure is at a maximum at a distance of half the sound wavelength from the reflecting surface. Thus, microphones built into the reflecting surface may have a sensitivity that is twice the value that the microphone would have without the,reflecting surface.
Conventional microphones may also be used with sound reflectors which concentrate the sound at the transducer. For example, a parabolic reflector may be utilized with a rearwardly facing transducer located at the focal point of the parabolic reflector. The transducer then receives the concentrated sound waves from the reflector and converts them into an electrical signal. One problem with this approach is that such microphones are particularly prone to feedback effects.
Thus, there is a need for improved microphones that take advantage of the acoustic gain achievable using a boundary layer or pressure zone.
SUMMARY
In accordance with one aspect, a microphone may include a concave reflector. A boundary layer creating surface is opposed to the concave reflector.
Other aspects are set forth in the accompanying detailed description and claims.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1
is a cross-sectional depiction of a pressure zone microphone in accordance with one embodiment of the present invention;
FIG. 2
is a cross-sectional view corresponding to
FIG. 1
of another embodiment of the present invention; and
FIG. 3
is a cross-sectional view corresponding to
FIG. 2
of still another embodiment of the present invention.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
Referring to
FIG. 1
, a microphone
10
may include a concave reflector
12
which in one embodiment of the present invention may have a parabolic reflecting surface
14
. In a low cost application, the reflector
12
may be formed of plastic. A boundary layer creating surface
16
is formed on element
18
. The element
18
may be situated near the focal point of the surface
14
. Thus, acoustic waves are concentrated by the surface
14
at the surface
16
. As a result, a compression layer is formed proximate to the surface
16
that creates a boundary layer or pressure zone effect.
Thus, the surface
14
may be forwardly facing in the sense that it faces the source of sound. Conversely, the surface
16
is opposed to the surface
14
and is rearwardly facing. A electrical transducer
20
is arranged in close juxtaposition to the surface
16
and is forwardly facing in one embodiment of the present invention. In one embodiment of the present invention, the transducer
20
may be situated in the boundary layer or pressure zone created by the surface
16
. The surface
16
is then situated just rearwardly of the focus of the surface
14
.
Any of variety of conventional microphones may be used as the transducer
20
including a conventional condenser microphone. The transducer
20
may be mounted in a housing
22
having a chamber
24
which may be sealed. Wires
26
passing through the chamber
28
may exit rearwardly from the housing
24
through a foam sealant
24
.
In one embodiment of the present invention, the element
18
is mounted on the housing
22
by a connector
30
. Advantageously, the connector
30
positions the element
18
near the focus of the reflecting surface
14
. The element
18
may have a surface which is a portion of a sphere and a surface
34
which is conical. As a result, the element
18
may have a tear-drop shape in one embodiment of the present invention.
When the reflector
12
is pointed at a sound source, acoustic waves, indicated by arrows in
FIG. 1
, are reflected off the surface
14
toward its focus, located near the surface
16
. Thus, sound wave energy is concentrated by the reflector
12
at the surface
16
. As a result, an intense boundary layer is created proximate the surface
16
.
While the element
18
is illustrated as tear-drop shaped, other shapes may be used as well. For example, as shown in
FIG. 2
, a spherical element
18
a
may be supported on supports
32
which are secured to the surface
14
. The element
18
may also be formed as a flattened sphere or a hemisphere as additional examples. It is desirable that the surface
16
be curved. In addition, it is advantageous that the surface
34
also be curved. The surface
34
may be effective to dissipate the compression wave built up upon the surface
16
.
In order to detect human speech, the reflector
12
may have a diameter of from about eight to twelve inches in accordance with one embodiment of the present invention. It may have a depth of about three inches, and the spacing between the surface
16
and the transducer
20
may be from about 0.1 to ⅛ of an inch. The ratio of the focal distance to the diameter of the reflector
12
may be from 30 to 50 percent so as to create a relatively narrow field of acoustic focus which may be effective over relatively long distances, in one embodiment of the invention.
As shown in
FIG. 2
, the spherical element
18
a
may be positioned with its center at the focus of the reflector
12
which may be a portion of a parabola. The spherical element
18
a
may be effective in creating reduced diffractive effects in the resulting compression layer or region of high acoustic intensity.
Referring to
FIG. 3
, in still another embodiment of the present invention, the reflector
12
a
may be adapted to removably receive a shotgun microphone
38
. A shotgun microphone is a narrow recording angle microphone that transduces sounds with different intensities depending on the angle from which the sound waves arrive at the microphone. The shotgun microphone is a tubular interference transducer. Sound coming straight into the microphone travels straight through its tubular body but all other sounds create interference and phase cancellation.
The shotgun microphone
38
may removably, telescopically plug into a opening
42
in the reflector
12
. A stop
44
may be positioned on the tubular shotgun microphone
38
to position the end
46
of the shotgun microphone
38
at a desired position with respect to the boundary layer creating surface
16
a.
In such case, the reflector
12
a
may completely enclose the phase cancellation openings of the shotgun microphone
38
, in one embodiment of the present invention. In this configuration, the microphone
10
b
is extremely specific, receiving sounds from sources at which the microphone
10
b
is specifically aimed. For example, in some embodiments of the present invention, the microphone's acceptance angle may be about five degrees or less so that whispers may be clearly picked up at distances on the order of a eighty feet.
At the same time, because the shotgun microphone
38
is removable from the reflector
12
a
(as indicated by the arrow A), it may be used independently of the reflector
12
a
in some cases. For example, the shotgun microphone
38
may be relatively angle specific, with an acceptance angle of forty degrees. Such microphones are typically used to focus in on a person's voice at distances of about four feet.
Thus, in some embodiments of the present invention, the microphone lob may be utilized in a video conference setting. The shotgun microphone
38
may be used without the reflector
12
a
when general conversation is taking place and may be used with the reflector
12
a
to focus on speech from a particular participant who is speaking to the group at other times. Thus, a relatively flexible microphone may be provided which advantageously benefits from boundary layer technology.
The microphone may show improved results compared to conventional microphones which are adversely affected by reverberations in the room. In other words, conventional microphones pick up not only the reverberations of the human speech from surrounding walls but the speech as well. Embodiments of the present invention may be focused on a particular user, thereby selectively picking up the person's speech independently from the reverberations.
While the present invention has been described with respect to a limited number of embodiments, those skilled in the art will appreciate numerous modifications and variations therefrom. It is intended that the appended claims cover all such modifications and variations as fall within the true spirit and scope of this present invention.
Claims
- 1. A microphone comprising:a concave reflector; a boundary layer creating surface opposed to said concave reflector; and an electrical transducer arranged in the boundary layer created by said boundary layer creating surface.
- 2. The microphone of claim 1 further including an electrical transducer arranged near said surface.
- 3. The microphone of claim 1 wherein said concave reflector includes a parabolic reflecting surface arranged in opposition to said boundary layer creating surface.
- 4. The microphone of claim 1 wherein said boundary layer creating surface is a curved surface.
- 5. The microphone of claim 4 wherein said boundary layer creating surface is spherical.
- 6. The microphone of claim 5 wherein said boundary layer creating surface is formed on a sphere.
- 7. The microphone of claim 1 wherein said boundary layer creating surface is formed on a teardrop shaped element.
- 8. The microphone of claim 2 wherein said transducer is part of a shotgun microphone.
- 9. The microphone of claim 8 wherein said shotgun microphone telescopically and removably engages said reflector.
- 10. The microphone of claim 9 including a stop to position one end of said shotgun microphone proximate to said boundary layer creating surface.
- 11. The microphone of claim 1 wherein said boundary layer creating surface is positioned proximate to the focal point of said concave reflector.
- 12. The microphone of claim 1 including an element, said boundary layer creating surface is formed on said element, said element having another surface which dissipates the boundary layer.
- 13. The microphone of claim 2 wherein said transducer is sufficiently close to said surface to lie in the boundary layer when said microphone is in use.
US Referenced Citations (3)