The present invention relates generally to electroacoustic transducers and, in particular, to a microphone or listening device with an improved sound inlet port.
Miniature microphones, such as those used in hearing aids, convert acoustical sound waves into an audio signal, which is processed (e.g., amplified) and sent to a receiver of the hearing aid. The receiver then converts the processed signal to acoustical sound waves that are broadcast towards the eardrum. In one typical microphone, a moveable diaphragm and a charged backplate convert the sound waves into the audio signal. The diaphragm divides the inner volume of the microphone into a front volume and a rear volume Sound waves enter the front volume of the microphone via a sound inlet.
Most prior art microphones, such as the prior art microphone of
Further, the front volume and back volume within the microphone housing are typically of different sizes, causing the inlet nozzle, which is placed near the front volume, to be located asymmetrically on one of the exterior surfaces Mounting a microphone having an inlet nozzle asymmetrically located on its exterior surface can be problematic in some types of hearing aids because the inlet nozzle must be aligned with the hearing aid's opening to the ambient environment in the hearing aid while the microphone is positioned in a spatially constrained location.
The present invention solves the aforementioned problems by providing a novel sound inlet plate that mates with the microphone The microphone comprises a housing with an inner volume and a first exterior surface with an aperture leading to the inner volume The microphone includes a transducing assembly within the housing for converting sound into an electrical signal
The inventive sound inlet plate is mounted on the first exterior surface and defines (possibly in combination with the first exterior surface) a passageway for transmitting sound to the aperture leading to the inner volume. The passageway receives the sound from an opening in the sound inlet plate, the opening being offset from the location at which the aperture is positioned on the first exterior surface. The sound inlet plate is made very thin so that it does not extend substantially away from the housing. Further, the location of the opening of the sound inlet can be offset to a more desirable position (e.g., the midpoint of the microphone exterior surface) to ease installation of the microphone in the hearing aid.
The inventive sound inlet plate is useful on omni-directional and directional microphones
The above summary of the present invention is not intended to represent each embodiment, or every aspect, of the present invention. This is the purpose of the Figures and the detailed description which follow.
The foregoing and other advantages of the invention will become apparent upon reading the following detailed description and upon reference to the drawings.
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 detail 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.
A printed circuit board 22 is mounted on a mounting plate 24 The signal from the transducing assembly 21 is sent to the printed circuit board 22 via a wire connection 23 The signal is processed on the printed circuit board 22 (e.g. amplified) to produce an output signal Because only a portion of the printed circuit board 22 is covered by the cover 14, one of the set of contacts 25a (
In this typical prior art microphone 10, sound reaches the interior of the housing 12 via the sound inlet nozzle 16 and the aperture 28. The inlet nozzle 16 may have a screen 29 to provide dampening and to serve as a shield for keeping foreign objects from entering the housing 12 Within the housing 12, the sound propagates through a front volume 30 and acts upon the diaphragm 20, which separates the front volume 30 from a back volume 32. The diaphragm 20 moves relative to the backplate 18 in response to the sound causing the backplate 18 to generate the electrical signal corresponding to the pressure change associated with the sound
One embodiment of the present invention is disclosed in
In operation, the sound inlet plate 50 receives sound through the sound inlet port 56 in its exterior wall 52. The sound propagates through a passageway 135 that is defined by the interior recess 54 of the plate 50 and the exterior wall of the housing 112 adjacent to the aperture 128. Eventually, the sound is transmitted through the aperture 128 and acts upon the transducing assembly 121.
Unlike prior art systems where the sound inlet extends substantially away from the housing of the microphone (such as the nozzle 16 in
Another benefit of the design of the sound inlet plate 50 is that it can be designed to provide a sound passageway leading from a hearing aid sound receptacle that is offset from the aperture 128 in the housing 112. In other words, the hearing aid's sound receptacle receiving sound from the ambient environment may not be in alignment with the aperture 128 in the housing 112. By locating the sound port 56 at a point on the exterior wall 52 of the sound inlet plate 50 that is in alignment with the hearing aid's sound receptacle, the interior recess 54 and the exterior surface of the housing 112 immediately adjacent thereto define an appropriate passageway 135 leading to the aperture 128. In sum, the sound port 56 can be vertically and/or horizontally offset from the aperture 128 in the housing 112.
Further, because the performance of some microphones dictate that the front volume 130 be a much smaller size than the back volume 132, the aperture 128 is usually near a corner of a surface of the housing 112, substantially offset from the central region on the exterior surface of the housing 112. Thus, a sound inlet plate 50 can be selected for a particular microphone 110 so as to locate the sound inlet port 56 in the central region of the microphone 110, providing more symmetry to the location of the sound inlet relative to that exterior surface of the microphone 110. This can facilitate easier orientation of the microphone 110 while it is being mounted within the hearing aid.
A further benefit is that a manufacturer of microphones may need only one style of a sound inlet plate 50 for one or more types of microphones. The manufacturer can then maintain a large inventory of such plates 50 that lack the sound inlet port 56. Once a design specification or order is received from a hearing aid manufacturer dictating the offset of the sound inlet port 56 relative to the aperture 128, the manufacturer can then form the sound inlet ports 56 in the plates 50 at the appropriate position in the exterior wall 52.
Additionally, the sound inlet plate 50 can be designed to have an acoustic inertance that helps to dampen the peak frequency response of the microphone 110. This can be accomplished by locating the sound inlet port 56 at a certain location relative to the aperture 128 and/or by providing a specific configuration to the interior recess 54. For example, instead of the recess 54 having the shape of a rounded rectangle, as shown in
The exterior of the sound inlet plate 50 can have various shapes to accommodate different microphones 110 to which it is mounted. For example,
Additionally, the sound inlet plate may extend over two or more exterior housing surfaces such that the sound inlet port on the plate is adjacent to an exterior surface on the housing (or cover) that is perpendicular to the exterior surface on the housing where the aperture leading to the front volume is located. Further, the sound inlet plate may define the sound passage by itself (i e., the housing does not assist in defining the passageway) by including an interior wall opposite the exterior wall 52 that includes the sound port Such an interior would contact the housing of the microphone. And, while the present invention has been described with respect to a microphone, it can be used on other electroacoustic transducers, such as a receiver.
The sound inlet plate 350 can be designed to increase or decrease the spacing between the sound ports 356 without changing the spacing between the apertures 328 to affect the performance of the directional microphone 310. Additionally, the plate 350 can be formed around a plurality of exterior surfaces on the housing 312 (e.g., having an “L” shape while fitting on two exterior surfaces). And, the recesses 354a, 354b can be independently designed to attain a certain (and different, if so desired) acoustical characteristic (e.g., acoustical inertance) in each recess 354. Finally, the plate 350 can be replaced by two independent plates, each of which leads to a corresponding one of the two sound inlet ports 356
While the present invention has been described with reference to one or more particular embodiments, those skilled in the art will recognize that many changes may be made thereto without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention Each of these embodiments and obvious variations thereof is contemplated as falling within the spirit and scope of the claimed invention, which is set forth in the following claims.
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