The invention relates to building products and, in particular, to acoustical ceiling tile.
Suspended ceilings customarily comprise a suspended metal grid and panels or tiles closing the spaces between the grid elements. Normally, the panels are constructed with selected materials and/or surface treatments to absorb sound. The ability of a panel to absorb sound is conventionally reported as its Noise Reduction Coefficient or NRC. NRC can range between 0 (no absorption) and 1 (full absorption) with a rating of 0.5, meaning it absorbs 50% of the sound energy striking it, being required to qualify a panel as “acoustical”. In the industry, panels rated at 0.7 are considered to have good acoustical performance. A need exists for acoustical tiles that achieve excellent NRC values and especially have the ability to absorb sound at target frequencies, have a high post consumer recycle content, resist sagging over time, are relatively light in weight, and are relatively inexpensive to produce.
The invention provides a ceiling panel with high level acoustical absorption properties using a core made of ordinary corrugated fiberboard, sometimes called cardboard. The core construction consists of numerous narrow strips of corrugated fiberboard laminated together. The corrugated board is cut perpendicular to the corrugations or flutes so that the flute openings lie in front and back planes of the panel core corresponding to the geometry of the finished panel. The front of the panel is covered with a suitable sheet of acoustically transparent material with proper air flow resistance and the back of the panel is optionally closed with another sheet, preferably with acoustical isolating properties.
In addition to high acoustical performance, the panel of the invention has the potential to be economically produced, light in weight, and have a high post-consumer recycle content. Corrugated fiberboard is typically produced on high speed machines with relatively low energy consumption and with high recycled paper content. Because the inventive panel is largely air space, it is relatively light in weight.
The disclosed vertical orientation of a flat liner board component of the corrugated fiberboard in the finished panel makes the panel sag resistant and capable of spanning large grid modules. The inventive panel can be produced directly from reclaimed corrugated fiberboard since there is no criticality in the uniformity of the flute size, flute alignment, and/or number of walls of the corrugated fiberboard used in a particular panel.
As shown in
Tests have indicated good acoustical properties, with an NRC in the order of 0.70, can be obtained with all of these standard flute sizes. Moreover, the panel construction, such as the panel thickness, can be selected to absorb sound at targeted frequencies.
By way of example, the thickness of the corrugated fiberboard core can be, as mentioned above, nominally 1 inch.
The flutes 19 of the core 11 extend perpendicularly to its major planar faces. The face sheet 12 is an acoustically transparent medium or film, optionally painted with proper air flow resistance that can serve as the appearance side visible to an observer in a room in which the panel 10 is installed. The face sheet 12 is adhered to the core 11 with a suitable adhesive. The face sheet 12 can be coated with a paint of a type used on the face of conventional ceiling tiles to improve its appearance and/or light reflectance and to obtain overall air flow resistance in a proper range. An example of a suitable face sheet 12 is a non-woven fabric such as fiberglass scrim with a caliper of 0.02 inch, basis weight of 125 g/m2, and specific air flow resistance of 45.6 Pa.s/m coated with a paint. The choice of face sheet 12 with proper air flow resistance was found to be important to the overall acoustical performance of the inventive panel; if the air flow resistance is too low or too high, the acoustical performance is impaired.
The side of the core 11 opposite the facing sheet 12 is preferably covered with the backing sheet 13 which can be a kraft paper laminated with a metal foil as used in some commercially available ceiling tile products. Other non-foiled paper can be used for the backing sheet 13. The backing sheet 13 can be used to obtain a good CAC (Ceiling Attenuation Class) value. A suitable adhesive is used to attach the backing sheet 13 to the core 11.
The single face board 15 illustrated most clearly in
It should be evident that this disclosure is by way of example and that various changes may be made by adding, modifying or eliminating details without departing from the fair scope of the teaching contained in this disclosure. The invention is therefore not limited to particular details of this disclosure except to the extent that the following claims are necessarily so limited.