This application is a U.S. National Phase Application under 35 U.S.C. § 371 of International Application No. PCT/US2015/058155, filed Oct. 29, 2015, which claims the benefit of priority of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/551,631 filed on Nov. 24, 2014 (now issued as U.S. Pat. No. 9,525,943).
An embodiment of the invention relates to an electronically controlled sound production system for use in a consumer electronics device, such as a desktop computer. Other embodiments are also described.
Many consumer electronics devices, such as desktop computers, laptop computers, and smart phones are becoming more compact. As these devices become smaller, the internal space available within their enclosure or housing for built-in loudspeakers becomes smaller as well. This is especially true as space within the device enclosure for speakers may compete with many other components such as circuit boards, mass storage devices, and displays. Generally, as a speaker decreases in size it is able to move less air mass and thus sound quality (or at least loudness) may decrease. This may be especially noticeable for sounds in the lower end of the audio spectrum, e.g. beneath 1 kHz. Furthermore, as the available open air volume within an electronic device shrinks, there is less air for a speaker to vibrate and thus limits the audible response. Similarly, the volume level and frequencies able to be produced by a speaker may also decrease as the size of the speaker decreases. Thus, as electronic devices continue to decrease in size, detrimental effects may be experienced for audio produced by the devices. Producing low frequency audio content (bass) out of thin consumer electronics devices is one of the most important problems in modern audio engineering.
The large surface area of the enclosure or housing of a consumer electronics device can be exploited to facilitate a mechanically actuated panel acoustic system. An embodiment of the present disclosure is an electronic device whose enclosure or housing panel is used as part of an acoustic system (electronically controlled sound producing system). The panel is divided into several sub-panels. For each sub-panel, the device includes one or more sub-panel actuators attached to vibrate the sub-panel. The actuator and its attached sub-panel convert an audio signal to acoustic output. Each actuator and sub-panel combination may receive a separate audio signal. The device includes a digital signal processor for controlling each of the sub-panel driving audio signals. The device may further include one or more backing frames that are attached to the panel (e.g., the interior surface of the panel) to provide boundary conditions to the sub-panels. The boundary conditions define a resonance frequency for each sub-panel.
In one embodiment, different sub-panels are designed to have different resonance frequencies. For each sub-panel, the audio signal driving the actuator of the sub-panel may be limited to a narrow frequency band at the resonance frequency of the sub-panel. The sum of the acoustic outputs of the sub-panels produces low frequency sound over a wide frequency band. In one embodiment, the resonance frequencies of the sub-panels correspond to notes on the musical scale. For each sub-panel, the digital signal processor processes or controls the audio signal that is driving the sub-panel so that the acoustic outputs of the sub-panels are coherent and can therefore be summed or combined constructively.
In one embodiment, each sub-panel has a sealed back volume (of air). In another embodiment, the backing frames have air passages that connect the back air volumes of two or more of the sub-panels, so that those sub-panels share a common back air volume. In one embodiment, such sub-panel division is left-right symmetric, and the sub-panels (when excited by their audio signals) can produce stereo audio. In another embodiment, sub-panel division is non-symmetric and two or more of the sub-panels may be excited to produce mono-audio.
Another embodiment of the present disclosure is a method for producing an audible sound on a device. Several sub-band audio signals are generated by filtering a received audio signal. The method then processes the sub-band audio signals separately so that the sub-band audio signals can be converted into acoustic outputs that are coherent and can therefore be summed or combined constructively. Several sub-panels, which are part of a panel on the device, are then driven with the processed sub-band audio signals, respectively. The panel may be part of an outer enclosure of the device.
In one embodiment, a sub-band audio signal has a narrow frequency band that surrounds a resonance frequency of a sub-panel that is driven by the sub-band audio signal. In order to process the sub-band audio signal, the method determines, for each frequency component of the sub-band audio signal, whether amplitude of the sub-band audio signal at that frequency exceeds a threshold. If so, the sub-band audio signal at that frequency is aligned to the resonance frequency of the sub-panel. In one embodiment, the resonance frequency of the sub-panel corresponds to a note on the musical scale.
The above summary does not include an exhaustive list of all aspects of the present disclosure. It is contemplated that the disclosure includes all systems and methods that can be practiced from all suitable combinations of the various aspects summarized above, as well as those disclosed in the Detailed Description below and particularly pointed out in the claims filed with the application. Such combinations have particular advantages not specifically recited in the above summary.
The embodiments are illustrated by way of example and not by way of limitation in the figures of the accompanying drawings in which like references indicate similar elements. It should be noted that references to “an” or “one” embodiment in this disclosure are not necessarily to the same embodiment, and they mean at least one.
In this section we shall explain several preferred embodiments of this disclosure with reference to the appended drawings. Whenever the shapes, relative positions and other aspects of the parts described in the embodiments are not clearly defined, the scope of the disclosure is not limited only to the parts shown, which are meant merely for the purpose of illustration. Also, while numerous details are set forth, it is understood that some embodiments of the disclosure may be practiced without these details. In other instances, well-known structures and techniques have not been shown in detail so as not to obscure the understanding of this description.
One of ordinary skill in the art will realize that the terms “front”, “forward”, “back/rear”, or “rearward” are used only to make it easier to understand, not to limit, the scope of the invention. In one embodiment, a front panel or back panel described in this disclosure can be any panel on a device.
The audio device 100 is capable of storing and/or processing signals such as those used to produce sound. The audio device 100 may be a laptop computer, a handheld electronic device, a mobile telephone, a tablet computer, a display device, an audio playback device, such as an MP3 player, or other electronic audio device. The panel 110 may be a back panel of the audio device 100, or another panel that is part of the outer enclosure of the audio device 100. The panel 110 can be made of glass, aluminum, or any suitable material, as long as it is reasonably stiff and reasonably flat, yet sufficiently flexible to vibrate for producing sound.
In one embodiment, the panel 110 is a uniform panel (e.g., having uniform thickness). The sub-panels 120-125 are divided by, and may be defined by, one or more backing frames 130 so that only the areas of the panel 110 that are within the boundaries formed by the backing frames 130 can be bent or vibrated. The backing frames 130 produce the proper boundary conditions for the sub-panels 120-125 to obtain the desired resonance frequency for each of the sub-panels. The backing frames 130 may be formed of an integral piece or separate pieces. The backing frames 130 may be formed of sufficiently heavy and sufficiently stiff plate that has openings formed therein that define the vibration areas of the sub-panels. In one embodiment, the backing frames 130 can be the front or rear outside wall of the audio device 100. In one embodiment, the outside wall can be touched by the user.
The audio device 100 was described above for one embodiment of the disclosure. One of ordinary skill in the art will realize that in other embodiments, this device can be implemented differently. For instance, instead of dividing the panel 110 into six sub-panels, the panel 110 can be divided into two sub-panels, three sub-panels, or more than three sub-panels. In one embodiment, the number of sub-panels depends on the stiffness of the panel 110 and the size of the panel. In one embodiment, the number of sub-panels also depends on the capabilities of additional loudspeakers (not shown) that operate together with the panel acoustic system to produce sound (e.g., as part of a multi-channel audio system).
The backing frames 130 are supported by the mid-plate 220, which is sufficiently heavy and sufficiently rigid to prevent the portions of the back panel 110 that are in contact with the backing frames 130 from vibrating. The mid-plate 220 may thus have one side that is in contact with the front panel 210 and an opposite side that is in contact with the backing frames 130. The mid-plate 220 cannot be touched by the user. The backing frames 130 wall off each sub-panel (e.g., 124 and 125) to create boundary conditions for each of the sub-panels. The boundary conditions created by the backing frames 130 may define the targeted resonance frequencies for the sub-panels. Even though all the backing frames are labeled with the same number 130 in
The back panel 110 can be made of glass, aluminum, or any suitable material, as long as it is reasonably stiff and reasonably flat. As illustrated in
One of ordinary skill in the art will recognize that the audio device 100 described in
In one embodiment, the actuator of each sub-panel is driven by a “narrow band” audio signal whose spectral content is at or around the resonance frequency of the sub-panel. By having different resonance frequencies for different sub-panels, one embodiment of the audio device is able to combine the acoustic outputs of the sub-panels to produce low frequency sound over a “wide band”. In one embodiment, the acoustic outputs of the sub-panels are combined with the acoustic output of other speakers (not shown) that produce sound at frequencies above the resonance frequencies of the sub-panels.
As illustrated in
The resonance frequency of a sub-panel is also determined by the length and width of the sub-panel, flexural rigidity (e.g., thickness and density) of the sub-panel, and boundary conditions of the sub-panel. In one embodiment, vibration mode 1:1 (the fundamental resonant mode) is the preferred mode for all sub-panels. In one embodiment, a sub-panel with vibration mode 2:1 is positioned as far away from a sub-panel with vibration mode 1:1 as far as possible.
In one embodiment, the panel 110 has uniform thickness, such that all sub-panels have the same thickness. In another embodiment, the panel 110 can have non-uniform thickness so that different sub-panels can have different thickness.
In one embodiment, the actuator of each sub-panel is driven by an individually digitally signal processed audio signal.
Each sub-panel of the mechanically actuated panel acoustic system is driven by a sub-band audio signal that is individually processed or controlled by a digital signal processor and an amplifier. For example, the audio signal driving sub-panel 120 is processed by the sub-panel digital signal processor 510a and the amplifier 520a, the audio signal driving sub-panel 121 is processed by the sub-panel digital signal processor 510b and the amplifier 520b, the audio signal driving sub-panel 125 is processed by the sub-panel digital signal processor 510c and the amplifier 520c.
In one embodiment, the channel combiner 505 combines input audio signals, e.g., left and right audio channels, and sends a combined audio signal to the sub-panel digital signal processors 510a-510c. Each of the sub-panel digital signal processors 510a-510c filters, e.g., using band pass filters, the received audio signal to derive a sub-band audio signal (which may become the sub-panel signal that drives the actuator of its corresponding sub-panel). In one embodiment, the spectral content of the sub-band audio signal is at or around the resonance frequency of the corresponding sub-panel. In one embodiment, each of the sub-panel digital signal processors 510a-510c may also perform equalization, cross-over filtering, delay, or all-pass filtering individually upon its sub-band signal (to derive the sub-panel signal for its corresponding sub-panel). In one embodiment, the sub-panel digital signal processors (e.g., 510a-510c) control the magnitude and phase of each individual sub-panel audio signal, so that the acoustic summation of all the sub-panels driven by these audio signals is coherent and constructive. That is, all the sub-panels produce acoustic outputs that have constructive interference. In one embodiment, the sub-panel digital signal processors 510a-510c communicate with the master audio processor 530 in order to achieve the constructive interference.
In one embodiment, because of the processing by the sub-panel digital signal processors (e.g., 510a-510c), the sound from each sub-panel reaches the listener at around the same time. These acoustic results may require that one or more of the digital signal processors 510 communicate with each other or with the master audio processor 530 to ensure that the sub-panel signals are produced or controlled appropriately, e.g., to set relative magnitude and phase behaviors amongst them. In one embodiment, such mechanism enables a portion of the digital signal processors to make sure that the majority of sub-panel signal energy that drives a particular sub-panel is centered around the frequency of the 1:1 vibration mode for the sub-panel. In one embodiment, a digital signal processor can be shared by two or more sub-panels. That is, a digital signal processor may process an audio signal to drive two or more sub-panels that have the same resonance frequency.
At block 610, process 600 receives an audio signal (e.g., derived from multi-channel digital audio). For each sub-panel, process 600 filters (at block 615) the audio signal to derive or generate a sub-band audio signal that is at or around the resonance frequency of the sub-panel. For each sub-panel, process 600 processes (at block 620) the sub-band audio signal that is driving one or more actuators of the sub-panel so that acoustic summation of all sub-panels leads to constructive interference. In one embodiment, the operations of blocks 615 and 620 are performed by the audio signal processing system 500 described in
Process 600 drives (at block 625) the actuators of the sub-panels with the processed sub-band audio signals. One of ordinary skill in the art will recognize that process 600 is a conceptual representation of the operations for using a panel of a device to produce acoustic output. The specific operations of process 600 may not be performed in the exact order shown and described. The specific operations may not be performed in one continuous series of operations, and different specific operations may be performed in different embodiments. Furthermore, process 600 could be implemented using several sub-processes, or as part of a larger macro process.
In one embodiment, the resonance frequencies of the sub-panels can be designed to coincide with notes on the musical scale.
In one embodiment, when the input audio signal has spectral content that falls into one of the narrow frequency bands that surround notes on the musical scale, the associated sub-panel audio signal (that is produced to drive the respective sub-panel) is aligned or tuned with (or transformed into) the corresponding musical note. For instance, spectral content anywhere within the frequency band 730 will be played as note 720; audio signal within the frequency band 731 will be played as note 721, and so on. In one example, audio signal at 436 Hz will be played as 440 Hz (note A4) because 436 Hz is within the narrow frequency band surrounding the note A4. By performing this tuning, the audio device sounds more musical and more efficient.
At block 810, process 800 receives an audio signal. Process 800 selects (at block 815) a frame of the audio signal. For each frequency component within a frequency band surrounding the resonance frequency of a sub-panel, process 800 measures (at block 820) the amplitude of the audio signal at the frequency component. Process 800 determines (at block 825) whether the amplitude of the audio signal at the frequency component is greater than a pre-defined threshold. If the amplitude is not greater than the threshold, process 800 proceeds to block 835. However, if the amplitude of the audio signal at the frequency component is greater than the threshold, process 800 plays (at block 830) the audio signal at the frequency component as the resonance frequency of the sub-panel, as described in relation to
At block 835, process 800 determines whether there are more frames of the audio signal for processing. If there are more frames, process 800 loops back to block 815 to select the next frame of the audio signal. If there are no more frames, process 800 ends. In one embodiment, the operations of blocks 815-825 are performed by the audio signal processing system 500 described in
One of ordinary skill in the art will recognize that process 800 is a conceptual representation of the operations for using a panel of a device to produce acoustic output. The specific operations of process 800 may not be performed in the exact order shown and described. The specific operations may not be performed in one continuous series of operations, and different specific operations may be performed in different embodiments. Furthermore, process 800 could be implemented using several sub-processes, or as part of a larger macro process.
In one embodiment, each sub-panel may have its own sealed back air volume. In another embodiment, backing frames may have air passages that connect the back air volume of the sub-panels so that all the sub-panels share a common back air volume. The sealed back air volume behind a sub-panel acts as a spring in determining the resonance frequency of the sub-panel. The resonance frequency of a sub-panel is a function of its own bending stiffness and the stiffness of the volume of air behind it. The relative contribution of the volume of air to the overall resonance of a sub-panel scales with the size of the sub-panel. Big sub-panel pushing against small air volume is actually extremely stiff, even if the sub-panel itself is loose. Therefore, all the sub-panels can experience the loosest possible spring if all the various volumes of air of the sub-panels are connected.
By sharing a common back air volume, the air stiffness for each sub-panel becomes much smaller. This allows low effective resonance frequency for sub-panels. This also allows the bending stiffness of the sub-panel to dominate in the determination of the resonance frequency of the sub-panel. Having the bending stiffness of the sub-panel dominating is beneficial for achieving the targeted resonance frequency.
While certain embodiments have been described and show in the accompanying drawings, it is to be understood that such embodiments are merely illustrative of and not restrictive on the broad invention, and that the invention is not limited to the specific constructions and arrangements shown and described, since various other modifications may occur to those of ordinary skill in the art. The description is thus to be regarded as illustrative instead of limiting.
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Child | 15510678 | US |