The present invention relates to electrostatic speaker systems, and more particularly to systems of electrostatic speakers and electronic arrangements for driving them.
In a first embodiment of the invention there is provided an electrostatic speaker including first and second stators and a diaphragm disposed therebetween, each of the stators and the diaphragm having an electrically conductive portion, wherein the conductive portion of the diaphragm is patterned as a mesh. In a further related embodiment, the mesh includes gaps, and the system further includes a conforming layer overlying the conducting portion of the diaphragm, and disposed so as to cover gaps in the mesh. Optionally the conforming layer is characterized by resistivity of at least 108 Ohms per square or higher. Also optionally, the conductive portion of the diaphragm is formed by printing on the diaphragm a conductive ink of having very finely divided conductive pigment particles in a thermoplastic resin. Optionally, the diaphragm has a highly conductive line along the border of the conductive portion of the diaphragm, the highly conductive line formed thereon by printing. In a related embodiment, there is provided an electrostatic speaker system that includes a pair of electrostatic speaker elements, each element having first and second stators and a diaphragm disposed therebetween. For each element, each of the stators and the diaphragm has an electrically conductive portion, and the conductive portion of each diaphragm is patterned as a mesh. A first one of the elements is coupled to an input filtered to provide audio signals in a first frequency range and a second one of the elements is coupled to an input filtered to provide audio signals in a second frequency range, the first frequency range lying above the second frequency range. In this embodiment, the conductive portion of the diaphragm of the first element has lower resistance per square than the conductive portion of the diaphragm of the second element. Optionally the conductive portion of the diaphragm of the first element has a finer mesh pattern than the conductive portion of the diaphragm of the second element.
In another embodiment, the invention provides an electrostatic speaker system including at least one electrostatic speaker element having a pair of stators and a diaphragm therebetween, each of the stators and the diaphragm having an least one electrically conductive portion. In this embodiment, the at least one speaker element has a maximum acceptable audio signal level than can be applied between the diaphragm and the stators. The embodiment includes a speaker drive circuit, having an (i) output coupled to the at least one speaker element, that supplies the audio signal and (ii) an audio input for receiving an audio input signal. The speaker drive circuit provides soft clipping of the audio input signal so that the audio signal applied between the diaphragm and the stators does not exceed the maximum acceptable level. Optionally, the speaker drive circuit includes at least one MOSFET transistor, and the speaker drive circuit may be implemented with a pair of MOSFET transistors connected in an anti-serial configuration in relation to the output of the drive circuit. As a further option, gates of the MOSFET transistors are fed by a signal reflecting the difference between a soft-clipped dc reference derived from the audio input signal to the drive circuit and a second dc signal derived from the output of the drive circuit.
In another embodiment, the invention provides an electrostatic speaker system including at least one electrostatic speaker element having first and second stators and a diaphragm disposed therebetween, each of the stators and the diaphragm having an electrically conductive portion, wherein the speaker element has a high frequency limit in its frequency response to an audio input. This embodiment further includes a decorative perforated plate disposed next to one of the stators. The perforated plate is spaced apart from the one of the stators by an amount less than a half-wavelength of the high frequency limit and has through-holes having a local hole density and size range defined so as to render the perforated plate substantially sound-transparent. Optionally, the electrically conductive portion of the diaphragm is patterned as a mesh.
In another embodiment, the present invention provides an electrostatic speaker system including first and second stators, each of the stators having an electrically conductive portion; and a diaphragm disposed between the stators and having a first and a second electrically conductive portions disposed on the opposite surfaces of the diaphragm. Optionally, the first and the second electrically conductive portions of the diaphragm are electrically connected so as to keep both conductive portions at an equal electric potential. Also optionally, at least one of the first and the second conductive portions is patterned as a mesh.
In yet another embodiment, the invention provides an electronics system for connection to an electrostatic speaker system, such speaker system having an approximately dipole sound radiation pattern and located in a listening room at a distance from a back wall. In this embodiment, the system includes an amplifier having an output for connection to the electrostatic speaker system. It also includes a compensation system coupled to the amplifier, such compensation system (i) providing filtering that can compensate for effects attributable to the approximately dipole radiation pattern of the electrostatic speaker system in the room and (ii) having parameters that are adjustable in accordance with a series of user adjustable settings. Finally, the embodiment includes a user interface coupled to the compensation system for specifying the user adjustable settings. The user adjustable settings include the distance of the speaker system from the back wall. Optionally, the electrostatic speaker system is of a specific model and the user adjustable settings include an identifier for the specific model. Also optionally, the room includes a floor and the user adjustable settings include positioning of the speaker system among choices including on the wall and on the floor along the wall. As a further option, the room includes a corner and the user adjustable settings include positioning of the speaker system among choices further including in a corner. As yet a further option, the room has a listener position and the user adjustable settings include distance of the speaker system from the listening position.
In another embodiment, the invention provides an electrostatic speaker system including a pair of electrostatic speaker elements, each element having first and second stators and a diaphragm disposed therebetween, a surface of the diaphragm defining a plane for the element of which it is a component. For each element, each of the stators and the diaphragm has an electrically conductive portion. A first one of the elements is coupled to an input filtered to provide audio signals in a first frequency range and a second one of the elements is coupled to an input filtered to provide audio signals in a second frequency range, the first frequency range lying above the second frequency range. The elements are mounted in a structure with respect to each other so that their planes form a dihedral angle. Optionally, the dihedral angle is variable so that the speaker elements can be adjusted at an angle relative to one another according to environmental characteristics of a room in which they can be situated. Also optionally, the dihedral angle includes a vertex and the structure includes a hinge at the vertex. As a further option, the structure includes a clamp to fix the dihedral angle at a desired setting for the room.
The foregoing features of the invention will be more readily understood by reference to the following detailed description, taken with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Definitions. As used in this description and the accompanying claims, the following terms shall have the meanings indicated, unless the context otherwise requires:
A “mesh” pattern in the conductive layer of a diaphragm means a pattern (however arranged) of gaps, in the conductive layer, that in the aggregate occupy a significant fraction of the area of the conductive layer. The pattern may be random or it may be repetitive. Each gap may, but need not, be rectangular. In a case where the pattern is repetitive, it need not necessarily have a uniform frequency of repetition.
“Soft clipping” of an input signal by a system means the system provides an output, in relation to the input, that is nonlinearly scaled. In particular, when the input signal falls within a range of amplitude between zero and a first threshold, the system provides a uniform level of gain, and when the input signal exceeds the first threshold, the system gain is tapered lower as a function of amplitude of the input signal. Typically the taper is developed (and therefore the gain is adjusted) so as to prevent the output from exceeding a specified level.
The present invention provides improvements to electrostatic speaker systems of the type disclosed in our published PCT application WO 2007/081584, entitled Electrostatic Loudspeaker Systems and Methods, which is hereby incorporated herein by reference as “Our Prior Application”.
Diaphragm with a Conductive Layer Mesh
In one of the embodiments of the invention herein, each of the diaphragm's conductive layers includes a mesh to reduce the mass of the diaphragm (and thereby, among other things, to improve its responsiveness) and consumption of materials used in the diaphragm. As compared to a continuous conductive layer embodiment described in Our Prior Application, a reduction of the area of the diaphragm's conductive layers due to structuring it as mesh also reduces effects of capacitive low-pass filtering that arise from a parasitic capacitance, formed by the conductive layers and the stators and non-uniformly distributed across the area of the speakers. In a further specific embodiment, we employ a rectangular mesh—as compared to an alternative horizontally striped pattern, for example—to reduce risks arising from open circuits created by printing errors. In other words, a serious printing defect in a striped mesh that spans the distance between contacts along the edges of the diaphragm (such as contacts along the silver line shown as item 81 in FIG. 8 in Our Prior Application) might prevent the stripe carrying the defect from receiving an electrical signal and therefore prevent the stripe from contributing to the conversion of electrical signal to sound. On the other hand, where the mesh is rectangular, of course, each horizontal stripe is traversed by a series of vertical stripes. Accordingly, with a rectangular mesh the hypothesized printing defect is circumvented by the prospect that the relevant horizontal stripe at a series of locations can receive the electrical signal from an adjacent horizontal stripe via any of the intersecting vertical stripes.
An example of such a mesh-patterned embodiment is presented in
Although a variety of mesh patterns may be generally chosen, a rectangular or square mesh may be preferred to simplify printing processes. An example of a mesh-pattern is shown in insert 104 of
The mesh-patterns can be judiciously varied, locally or otherwise, to provide for a performance as desired. For example, choosing of the shape of mesh-elements can be used to define and control the spatial radiation patterns produced by the diaphragm portions.
In addition, modification of the resistance of the mesh may be advantageously used, for example, to decrease resistance in the high-frequency section of the diaphragm, so as to reduce effects arising from parasitic capacitance. To this end, in some embodiments of the invention the conductive foil layer may be so patterned as to provide for resistance values of about 100 Ohms per unit area of the conductive foil in the high frequency section of the diaphragm and about 1 MOhm per unit area in the low- and mid-frequency section.
In a further related embodiment, some or all of the mesh pattern of a diaphragm may be coordinated so as to correspond in some fashion to the pattern of perforations associated with the stators; such an arrangement may efficiently develop electrostatic forces from electrical power applied to the diaphragm relative to the stators. In one embodiment, the pattern of perforations has the same spatial frequency as that of the mesh pattern. In a related embodiment, the pattern of perforations has a spatial frequency that is a multiple of the spatial frequency of the mesh. Alternatively, the spatial frequency of the perforations may be an odd half harmonic of the spatial frequency of the mesh, so as to avoid problems of alignment of the perforations with the mesh.
It will also be appreciated that local variations of the pattern of the mesh may be used to advantageously affect the distribution of an acoustic radiation pattern. For example, a more open mesh near the edges of the diaphragm section may be employed to reduce electrostatic forces applied by the stators in these regions to as to affect the radiation pattern and to reduce stress near the edges of the diaphragm.
Moreover, mesh-dimensions may be judiciously chosen to provide for difference impedance drive for the sections of the diaphragm associated with different spectral content of the generated acoustic field. For example, to provide for low impedance drive (determined by the required low capacitive load) at high-frequencies, the high-frequency section of the diaphragm may comprise a finer mesh, thus being characterized by lower resistance values. In comparison, the mesh of the diaphragm associated with a low-frequency section may be structured in a coarse fashion and be bigger. Furthermore, a conformal layer protecting the conductive foil (and indicated as protective layer in embodiment of
Different sections of the diaphragm may be oriented adjacent to each other and in any order. In one embodiment, however, the different sections are arranged in order of increasing frequency bands for which the sections are adapted, so as to provide a mirror like arrangement in the case of two loudspeakers for generating a stereo sound field. A further benefit of such arrangement lies in the prospect of employing progressively small stator-to-diaphragm spacing with sections having progressively higher frequency bands, in the manner previously discussed. Other arrangements are not excluded, like arranging the different sections in a clockwise or anticlockwise fashion in a plane. In some specific embodiments, for example, the rectangular mesh pattern of the conductive layer of the diaphragm may be rotated at a pre-determined angle such as 45 degrees, for example, with respect to the direction of the elongation of the diaphragm, which increases the foil's resistance to mechanical tensions and stresses arising due to diaphragm deformations.
Diaphragm with an Antistatic Layer
Conventionally, implementations of the diaphragm comprise a single conductive layer disposed on the diaphragm substrate, as shown in the schematic of an electrostatic speaker element of
To address this problem and improve the performance of the electrostatic speaker, in one embodiment of the current invention a lightly conducting, an antistatic layer is disposed on the back surface of the diaphragm base, opposite to the conductive layer, as shown in
Perforated Front Grill
Embodiments of an electrostatic speaker of the current invention may include a decorative perforated plate that is used as a protective covering of the stators and diaphragm that does not alter the intrinsic performance of the embodiments of the invention in any significant way. In one embodiment, such plate is disposed next to one of the stators at a distance not exceeding a half-wavelength in air of sound at 20 kHz (or if the speaker's frequency response has a lower high-frequency limit, then at the high-frequency limit of the speaker's response), is metallic, and has through holes with a local hole density and size range defined so as to make the perforated plate substantially transparent to sound generated by the electrostatic speaker. In a specific embodiment, the decorative plate is made of a steel or aluminum sheet that is thinner than about 0.8 mm and is perforated with round through holes of about 3 mm in diameter occupying at least 55% or 60% of the total area of the plate.
In another related embodiment, the decorative plate may be structured as a grille, i.e. a metallic plate containing opening of several slits disposed in the plate side by side and occupying more than about 55% of the total area of the plate.
Soft clipping, Protection and Safety Features
Various embodiments of the invention provide an audio protection circuit operating in conjunction with the audio filter and the DC high voltage power source. Our Prior Application describes such protection circuits in connection with
Soft clipping implementations are described in a number of references, including in U.S. Pat. No. 5,987,407 issued to Wu et al on Nov. 16, 1999 and the white paper by Rod Elliott, entitled “Soft Clipping,” published on a web page created 15 Apr. 2006, at www.sound.westhost.com/articles/soft-clip.htm, discussing soft-clipping technologies. These documents are hereby incorporated herein by reference, and their implementations may be used herein, provided that the clipping levels are tailored in the manner described in the previous paragraph. Mr. Elliott notes in his white paper, however, that the diode clipping circuit introduces some harmonic distortion even at relatively low signal levels.
One embodiment of the invention herein providing soft-clipping protection circuitry particularly tailored to electrostatic speakers is schematically shown in
Referring now to the left-hand portion of
The use of MOSFETs offers several advantages over the relay employed in Our Prior Application:
Embodiments of soft-clipping circuitry of the invention allow for attenuation of AC signals by providing a control that operates on current in both directions. Moreover, here, the clipping also limits maximum current as well as maximum voltage.
The right-hand portion of
Switching-off of the audio signal in case of emergency may be implemented with the use of a main control to switch off the MOSFETs. In addition, a programmable measuring loop may be employed to constantly appraise the temperature of the MOSFETs that is known to increase at high audio-signal levels. Whenever the temperature exceeds a safe limit, the MOSFETs may be switched off to cool, interrupting the audio signal and protecting the circuitry.
It should be appreciated that in some embodiments other features of protections and safety for the electrostatic speaker protection feature, including soft-clipping, may be also realized using microcontrollers or other microprocessor-based systems running suitable programs. For example, monitoring of potential leakage of the stator plates of the embodiment of the speaker may be implemented using a safety-protection feedback loop and a computer program code designed to switch off a power supply once a stator-plate leakage has been detected. Additionally, all filter and timing settings in the protection circuitry may be pre-programmed. A schematic example of the circuitry of an embodiment providing such programmable advanced protection feature is presented in
Programmable implementation of overvoltage protection of electrostatic speakers in the current embodiments dispenses with a conventionally used “in real time” change of electronic components. Instead, embodiments of the system of the invention incorporate an interface including a serial RS232 interface and a programming interface. The programming interface that allows for pre-programming the microcontroller, while the serial interface facilitates a set-up and change of various parameters as well as programmable monitoring the operational parameters of the circuitry. In addition or alternatively, a USB or other type of interface, such as wireless interface (using a standard such as IEEE 802.11(b) or (g)), can be implemented in another related embodiment of the protection and control systems, including control and update of software for the electrostatic speakers.
Operational parameters of the electrostatic speaker system of the invention that are adjustable and programmable with the use of a microcontroller may include:
1. Low level of audio signal (switch high voltage off when no audio is present for a certain amount of time):
In addition, numerous parameters may be read and monitored using the same microcontroller circuitry:
The microcontroller may be additionally configured to provide for a well-controlled power shut-down process by engaging, for example, an extra capacitor when monitoring the adapter voltage indicates that a power shut-off is imminent. Microcontroller may also be employed to count parameters that provide insight into the operational history of the electrostatic loudspeakers (such as number of errors due to audio-signal overload, or number of leakages, or power on time), and save this during power down in a permanent memory of the system.
Electrostatic Speaker With Angular Arrangement
As will be appreciated by a skilled artisan, a flat panel electrostatic speaker generates sound as a dipole. A dipole can be described as a bi-directional source comprising two point sources (which, as applied to the flat-panel electrostatic speaker, will correspond to the front and back sides of the speaker) separated by distance D (corresponding to a separation between the front and back sides) along the dipole axis and operating with 180° phase difference. At low frequencies, the spatial pattern of acoustic radiation is known in the art to have the appearance of a figure “8”. The normalized transfer function H(D/A.), where is a wavelength of interest, and the polar directivity pattern R of a dipole are expressed, as functions of angle of radiation at the wavelength λ with respect to the dipole axis, with formulae (1) and (2) and shown in
Typical dipole characteristics comprise a 6 dB/octave decay for frequencies DR, <0.5 and local minima of normalized transfer function |H(D/λ)| at D/λ=1, 2, 3, . . . N. At low frequencies, as we have said, the spatial pattern of acoustic radiation assumes the look of a figure “8”. Typically, a bidirectional radiating pattern of a dipole is restricted to frequencies D/λ<0.7 It follows from equations (1) and (2) that increasing the distance D between the two point sources forming the dipole lowers both the lower and the upper limit of the bidirectional operating range.
As polar plots of
In practice, loudspeakers are not used in free space but are placed in a room (of length L), often in proximity to walls. In such environment, the acoustic waves generated by the speaker interact with walls and excite acoustic modes of the room. As will be readily appreciated by a person skilled in the art, the acoustic modes of the room have substantial influence on the quality of sound in the room, especially in the sparsely modal frequency range. Good coupling between the dipole radiation and the room modes, therefore, is required. Such efficient coupling may be achieved by positioning a dipole-like-radiating electrostatic speaker at location of nodes of air-pressure distribution in the room (corresponding the locations of positions of creasts of the velocity distribution). In
In a real, three-dimensional room the dipole source has to efficiently excite, of course, three-dimensional acoustic modes of the room to create an efficient in-room transfer-function without gaps. Our research unexpectedly demonstrated that optimization of excitation of the three-dimensional acoustical modes in the room at all available frequencies may be achieved by separating a low-frequency portion of a flat-panel electrostatic speaker from a high-frequency portion, followed by positioning these two portions at an angle to one another.
An example of such embodiment is presented in top view in
It will be appreciated that, in specific embodiments of the invention, a speaker may generally comprise a plurality of sections or portions consisting of more than two portions, each portion generating sound within a respective frequency band, the portions being disposed at judiciously chosen angles with respect to one another and to the fiducial direction in the room so as to optimize the efficiency of coupling between the sound waves generated by the speaker and the acoustic modes of the room.
Electronics User Interface, Digital Filtering, and Compensation for Room Acoustics
As will be readily understood by the one skilled in the art, room acoustics—stemming from the presence of reflective surfaces in the room—significantly affects the room transfer function. For example, if a reflective surface is parallel to the axis of a radiating dipole (i.e., normal to the front facet of the electrostatic speaker), less energy is reflected (because of the pressure-node of the dipole). To the contrary, the influence of an acoustically reflective surface (such as a wall 1 of
Therefore, the room surfaces that affect the performance of the flat panel electrostatic speaker the most are the frontwall behind the speaker, the backwall behind the listener (walls 1 and 2, respectively, in
Provided that the positioning of a flat panel electrostatic speaker in a typical room as well as the listening distance (distance l in
In specific embodiments of the present invention, parameters of compensation systems implemented in the AV receiver can be varied by the user through a user interface implemented to optimize the performance of the electrostatic system in the local environment. These parameters are designed to take into account the influence of the ambient environment where the system operates, such as, for example, dimensions of a room, or placement of the loudspeakers in the room, or room acoustics. In such specific embodiments, the user may access, through the user interface, a menu (whether graphical or textual) containing a set of choices corresponding to major physical parameters that have been built into the system based on, for example, statistical generalization of known housing construction parameters or furnishings in a typical residential environment, or even a type of speakers used (as specified by the manufacturer). In particular, the parameters are established not by asking the user to specify directly the parameters for the compensation but rather to provide details such as the model number of the speakers, and distances governing placement of the speakers in the room, and these settings are used to establish the parameters of compensation.
A user interface may be implemented in various ways known in the art, for example through a display located in the AV receiver that is temporarily coupled to display user-adjustable parameters of the AV receiver. The user may specify via the interface a discrete distance between the speaker and the front wall behind it (small, medium, large), model of speakers used, or indicate a preferred positioning of the speakers (on wall, on floor along wall, in the corner) in combination with approximate distance to the listeners.
In another embodiment, one of the choices offered by the receiver may be a request for automatic empirical determination of acoustic response of the ambient environment, discussed in Our Prior Application. Additional equalization for rooms with small or large high frequency damping is be useful to improve the tonal balance of such systems in different environments.
Some of the design parameters considered in reference to
It would be appreciated that embodiments of electronic compensation may be used for the purposes of balancing the acoustic deficiencies arising, as discussed above, due to reflection of the sound off the front wall. For example,
In further related embodiments, in response to the user choices, an appropriate assembly such as compensating network 113 of FIG. 38 in Our Prior Application, responsible for operational integration of the system into the environment, may automatically activate all system components to perform their designated functions in a pre-set fashion statistically optimized to a combination of parameters so chosen. The choice of “on floor along wall” combined with the user-input of an approximate distance of the speakers from the wall may result, for example, in initiating a correction signal to avert phase cancellation effects caused by the reflection of the sound off the wall, while a combination of the acoustic response of the room and room's size will allow to approximate a desired response of the system's amplifier.
The embodiments of the invention described above are intended to be merely exemplary; numerous variations and modifications will be apparent to those skilled in the art. All such variations and modifications are intended to be within the scope of the present invention as defined in any appended claims.
This application claims priority from U.S. Provisional Patent Application Nos. 61/050,489 filed on May 5, 2008 and 61/050,897 filed on May 6, 2008, a disclosure of each of which is incorporated herein in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61050489 | May 2008 | US | |
61050897 | May 2008 | US |