This application claims the benefit of European Patent Application Serial No. 15190561.9, filed Oct. 20, 2016, and titled “Microphone Assembly With Suppressed Frequency Response,” which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
The present invention relates to a microphone assembly having a frequency specific suppressed response. In particular, the present invention relates to a microphone assembly having a reduced frequency response with respect to a resonance peak.
Conventional microphones of today, typically being a MEMS microphone or electret condenser microphone (ECM), generally consist of a sound inlet, a front volume, a sensing element (MEMS or cartridge) and rear volume. A pressure difference between the microphone exterior and interior will generate a volume flow from the sound inlet, through the front volume and sensing element to the rear volume. The magnitude of the volume flow depends on 1) the magnitude of the pressure difference and 2) the frequency dependent acoustic impedance of the flow path. The volume flow that passes the sensor diaphragm of the sensing element has direct relation to the sensitivity of the microphone; the larger the flow the more sensitive the microphone and vice versa.
Conventional MENS and ECM microphones are often represented by a simplified equivalent lumped element model (LEM). The LEM divides the total microphone impedance into three subsystems with their specific acoustic impedance, i.e.
A frequency response of a particular, in this case MEMS, microphone is given in
The frequency response shows a low-frequency roll-off, a flat middle region around 1 kHz and a sharp resonance peak at 20 kHz. The sharp resonance peak indicates that the system is undamped, which is favorable if the microphone acoustic self-noise needs to be minimal. Unfortunately, a sharp resonance peak also results in a large difference in the peak sensitivity value versus the value at 1 kHz. This large difference in dynamic range generally is problematic for the front-end electronics of the application.
Conventional measures to reduce the delta peak sensitivity are adding acoustic damping, e.g. by means of placing a grid in the sound port, or by applying an electronic low-pass filter in the microphone amplifier. The microphone amplifier may be implemented as an application specific integrated circuit (ASIC). Adding acoustic damping is easy to implement, but it greatly increases the microphone acoustic self-noise. As to the efficiency of acoustic damping one should expect that the self-noise will increase with 0.5 dB in response to a 1 dB peak reduction. Adding an electronic low-pass filter has less effect on the total noise of the microphone, but comes at the expense of added ASIC complexity, increased power consumption and, not in the least extent, to an increase of output distortion.
Conventional prior art solutions are suggested in both U.S. Pat. No. 6,950,529 and US 2015/0043747 A1.
It may be seen as an object of embodiments of the present invention to provide a microphone assembly with reduced frequency response at or near a resonance peak without suffering from the above-mentioned disadvantages.
The above-mentioned object is complied with by providing, in a first aspect, a microphone assembly comprising
Thus, the present invention relates to a microphone assembly where the effective acoustical impedance of the rear volume is adapted to reduce the sensitivity of the microphone assembly.
The reduced sensitivity may be achieved in a frequency range including the resonance peak. The width of the frequency range may typically be chosen from some hundreds Hz to several kHz.
The incoming acoustical sound may only reach rear volume compartments via the microphone unit in that the acoustically connected rear volume compartments form, in combination, a substantially closed rear volume. Thus, the boundaries of the rear volume as a whole may form a substantially closed volume leaving no acoustical access to the microphone unit via the rear volume.
The rear volume may comprise a first and a second rear volume compartment being acoustically connected via an acoustical filter. The acoustical filter may be a band-stop filter or a notch filter. However, other types of filters may also be applicable. In addition, the microphone assembly may further comprise one or more additional rear volume compartments. The one or more additional rear volume compartments may be acoustically connected to the first and/or the second rear volume compartment connected via one or more acoustical filters. In addition, the one or more additional rear volume compartments may be acoustically via one or more acoustical filters. Again, the acoustical filters may be band-stop filters or notch filters.
The rear volume compartments may be separated by a substantially rigid separation member having the acoustical filter arranged therein or attached thereto. A substantially rigid separation member may thus separate all neighbouring rear volume compartments or only a number thereof. The acoustical filter may be implemented in various ways. For example, the acoustical filter may comprise a number of through-going openings in the substantially rigid separation member. The through-going opening may be provided directly in the substantially rigid separation member. Alternatively, the through-going openings in the substantially rigid separation member may be provided as tube-shaped through-going openings. The length of the tube-shaped through-going openings may be longer than an average thickness of the substantially rigid separation member.
Instead of having the acoustical filter integrated with the substantially rigid separation member the acoustical filter may be implemented as a discrete acoustical filter which may be attached to the substantially rigid separation member using appropriate fastening means. Various types of discrete acoustical filters may be implemented. For example, the discrete acoustical filter comprises a porous material. Examples of porous materials are open foams and (woven or nonwoven) polymer fibres, such as expanded polytetrafluoroethylene (ePTFE).
Alternatively, the discrete acoustical filter may comprise a flexible membrane being suspended in the substantially rigid separation member. Also, the discrete acoustical filter may comprise a passive MEMS structure. Such passive MEMS structures may have the resemblance of the perforated backplate of a MEMS microphone, in which the dimensions of the perforations can be accurately controlled by semiconductor processing.
The microphone assembly may comprise one or more additional rear volume compartments in order to increase the order of the acoustical filter.
The microphone unit of the microphone assembly may comprise a MEMS microphone or an electret microphone. However, other types of microphones may be applicable as well. It should be noted that the microphone assembly may comprise a plurality of microphone units. In case of a plurality of microphone units a substantially closed rear volume comprising acoustically connected rear volume compartments may be associated with each microphone unit. The acoustically connected rear volume compartments may set an effective acoustical impedance of each rear volume in order to reduce the sensitivity of the microphone assembly with respect to a resonance peak.
Moreover, the microphone assembly may further comprise an amplifier for amplifying the electrical signal from the microphone unit, and a front volume being acoustically connected to an acoustical sound inlet for receiving incoming acoustical sound.
In a second aspect, the present invention relates to a hearing device comprising a microphone assembly according to the first aspect, said hearing device comprising a hearing aid being selected from the group consisting of: behind-the-ear, in-the-ear, in-the-canal and completely-in-the-canal.
The present invention will now be explained in further details with reference to the accompanying figures, wherein
While the invention is susceptible to various modifications and alternative forms, specific embodiments have been shown by way of example in the drawings and will be described in details 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.
In its broadest aspect the present invention relates to a microphone assembly with the capability of suppressing the microphone assembly response at or around a resonance peak, while leaving the frequency response at frequencies outside a filter range essentially unaffected. The present invention is also applicable in relation to other applications, including the suppression of a microphone response at certain ultrasonic frequencies, or the suppression of unwanted resonances.
Generally, the suppression of the frequency response at or around the resonance peak is provided by introducing an acoustical filter in a substantially closed rear volume of the microphone assembly. The acoustical filter is specific to a single frequency (notch filter) or to a specific frequency band (band-stop filter). The order of the acoustical filter can be changed to alter frequency specificity. Increasing the order of the acoustical filter sharpens the filter transitions and hence increases the filter specificity.
The acoustical filter is implemented by placing a structure inside the rear volume of microphone assembly such that the effective acoustic impedance of the rear volume is changed to the required filter impedance. The effective acoustical impedance of the microphone assembly changes in a manner so that it acts as a rejection filter to the volume flow that passes through a sensing element (microphone) of the microphone assembly. The volume flow is only allowed to reach the rear volume via the sensing element (microphone). The reduced volume flow effectively reduces the sensitivity of the microphone.
Thus, according to the present invention the impedance of the substantially closed microphone rear volume is changed such that it acts as a rejection filter to the volume flow (qv) that passes through the sensing element 209, cf.
The following relationships apply between the compliances of the total rear volume, Ca,rv, the first compartment 204, Ca,rv1, and the second compartment 205, Ca,rv2:
C
a,rv1
=α×C
a,rv
C
a,rv2=(1−α)×Ca,rv
C
a,rv1
+C
a,rv2
=C
a,rv
0≦α≦1
An important design parameter for the acoustical filter is the ratio, a, between the volume of the first compartment 204 and the volume of the initial rear volume. This ratio can be between 0, i.e. the second compartment 205 (in this case only the second) have a sum of volumes equal to the initial rear volume and 1, i.e. the first compartment 204 has the same volume as the initial rear volume. In general, a smaller alpha allows for a larger flow qv2, which results in a stronger filter with higher rejection factor. However, as a smaller alpha also increases the (unwanted) self-noise of the microphone, there exist a (application specific) trade-off between filter efficiency and added noise. The effect of different alpha's on the peak damping and noise performance in case of a second order band-stop are shown in
The acoustic mass of the filter structure Za,filter is chosen such that the filter resonance is at the required frequency. To do this the following relationship is used:
As such, the acoustic mass Ma,filter depends on the chosen value for alpha, the given compliance of the original microphone rear volume Ca,rv and the selected frequency f0. When alpha and the acoustic mass are set, the sharpness and rejection factor of the filter (Q) is further controlled by selecting the appropriate value of the acoustic resistance Ra,filter according to:
When Ra,filter is chosen 0, the Qn goes to infinity, and the filter will act as a notch filter that only works at f0. Any other value for Ra,filter will dampen the notch and will lower the sharpness Qn of the filter. Consequently, the filter then acts as a band-stop filter to a frequency range centered at f0.
In general, microphones for hearing aids applications can have a peak resonance between 5 kHz and 40 kHz, where electrets microphones generally have their resonance below 10 kHz and MEMS microphones generally have a peak between 10 kHz and 40 kHz. This difference between ECM and MEMS is mostly explained by the difference in acoustic compliance of the sensor diaphragm and the overall acoustic mass, i.e. the diaphragm acoustic compliance of current MEMS designs is 3 to 5 times lower than the diaphragm compliance of ECMs.
Because the rear volume compliances of existing ECM and MEMS microphones are more or less in the same order of magnitude, the value for the filter acoustic mass will typically be smaller for MEMS microphones than for ECMs. For example, when setting alpha at 0.8, a MEMS microphone with f0 at 20 kHz and rear volume of 6 mm3 needs Ma,filter to be about 9.5×103 kg/m4. For a specific ECM with f0 at 6 kHz and also 6 mm3 rear volume, Ma,filter now needs to be 104.7×103 kg/m4. This is an order of magnitude larger than for the MEMS.
As indicated in
In
In
In
In
In
In
In
In
In
It should be noted that the rear volumes of
As a general consideration the location of the filter structure on the structure that separates the rear volume compartments is arbitrary. The locations of filter sub-structures on the structure that separates the rear volume compartments is also arbitrary. The total size of the filter structure depends on the required filter function and is in the limit constrained by the system dimensions. Implementation principles can be combined to achieve the required filter impedance.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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15190561.9 | Oct 2015 | EP | regional |