The invention relates to the technical sector of high-fidelity sound reproduction appliances, specifically to the loudspeakers of such appliances, and more specifically to a diaphragm for such a loudspeaker.
The diaphragm of a transducer ensures mechanical coupling of a moving coil which is positioned in an air gap and through which a modulated current passes and the molecules of air in order to ensure sound reproduction. In addition to geometric shape, the qualities of a diaphragm are subject to three criteria at the mechanical level: the weight of the diaphragm, its flexural strength, and its damping.
The diaphragm is customarily produced as a single-material structure, of a material offering a good compromise among the three preceding criteria. As a result, in a 16.5-cm medium-range woofer, for example, it is not possible to have the rigidity desired for ideal reproduction of the low-pitched sounds while mastering the damping for proper reproduction of the medium-pitched sound zone.
A monostructural solution does not permit individual optimization of the criteria.
Significant improvement was made by the patent filed by the applicant under number FR 95 03092, on the basis of a sandwich diaphragm of thermomolded foam both surfaces of which are covered by a glass film.
The progress made in the quality of digital sources and amplification (both in musical creation and in reproduction), with increasingly wider frequency bands extending from 20 Hz to 40 kHz, make new demands of transducers:
The problem is that these parameters are interrelated and incompatible.
Considering the new digital audio formats such as 24 bits/96 kHz, Dolby Digital, SACD, DVD Audio, et al., it is strategically important to make improvements in electrodynamic transducers such that the quality leap made by these formats ultimately becomes perceptible.
A constant factor is necessarily introduced, in that monostructural diaphragms allow of no development, since their quality is bound up with the material used. It is realistic to state that all the possibilities have been explored over the last fifty years. Single-layer composite materials exhibit the same limits.
There is thus a significant need for a diaphragm which would be further improved over the diaphragms described in the French patent cited in the foregoing while the cost of manufacture would remain compatible with the demands of the market.
This invention employs a multilayer and multimaterial composite structure. The structure takes priority over the material with respect to rigidity. The solution proposed provides a flexural rigidity nearly 20 times greater than that of the conventional solutions for a cone of identical cover coat (6854 for this invention, as against 366 N/mm for cellulose pulp, 313 N/mm for Impregnated™, 77 N/mm for aluminum, and 42 N/mm for polypropylene).
With respect to the French patent cited in the foregoing it may be said that appreciably the same results are obtained in terms of rigidity, but an important difference is made which is based on the process in which the resin rate and the polymerization cycle are controlled. Higher stability of the characteristics is ultimately obtained.
The choice of materials, in particular those for the core of the structure, allows an adjustment at the end of damping.
As a result of the material used and the number of layers, the inner and/or outer layers permit precise adjustment of the mass and rigidity and of the speed of propagation of sound in the diaphragm.
As was stated above, this results in a large number of parameters some of which are incompatible.
The applicant has, however, succeeded in designing cost-effective multilayer, multimaterial diaphragms having greatly improved characteristics.
The unique advantage of the technology thus developed is the ability to effect mechanical adjustment of the response of a transducer by adapting the characteristics of the diaphragm to the source.
This eliminates the need in the anterior art for resort to subsequent correction by electric filtration, something which creates phase problems and alters the sound reproduction.
The invention thus relates to a diaphragm 1 for a loudspeaker characterized in that
The composition of the outer skin, especially the number and nature of the “outer” plies varies as a function of the characteristics desired.
The presence of the inner skin and its composition, especially the number of the “inner” plies, varies as a function of the characteristics desired.
As non-restrictive examples, the woven or nonwoven fibers making up the inner and outer plies will be selected from the following categories:
The foam making up the core of the “structural” type is selected from among the following:
The impregnation resin selected is one of the following:
The expert will be able to select the materials indicated in the foregoing as a function of the properties sought by referring to the attached drawings and, optionally, by conducting simple tests.
It should be noted that use may be made of different fibers and different impregnating resins, or conversely identical ones, for producing the plies, all combinations as determined by the properties sought being possible. Use may also be made of a combination of fibers and resin for the inner plies and another combination for the outer plies, or, again, the same combination.
For industrial reasons preference will be given to use of the same combination.
This sandwich material is polymerized either by compression between mold and countermold or in vacuum molding, at a temperature permitting polymerization of the resin and accordingly a mechanically uniform structure. The invention relates to this process as well.
The current method permits production of a diaphragm for base-range and medium-range transducers whose diameters vary from 46 cm to 10 cm.
Random sampling of frequency and pulse response curves has been carried out for six variations of membranes of the same diameter for a 165-mm loudspeaker.
The thicknesses of the inner and outer plies were varied by slicing the material to obtain different thicknesses ranging from 1.6 mm to 4 mm.
The following embodiments were produced; the sensitivity curves of each structure (Figures X <<A>>) and the pulse response curves (Figures X <<B>> are indicated on the opposite page; the structures given as examples are presented in the form of diagrams in Figures X <<C>>, the plies or skins being separated from the core exclusively for the sake of clarity of presentation.
These figures show (comparative behavior of alternative diaphragms with a common base of 6½″-16.25 cm loudspeakers) that:
1. Effect of number of plies on a sandwich structure with constant core thickness: The rigidity is increased by increasing the number of plies (3 plies CWM-3P/M 1.5, FIGS. 3A/3B, as opposed to 2 plies CWM-2P/M 1.5, FIGS. 2A/2B). The amplitude response is linearized in the 100-1000 Hz band; the pulse is better reproduced and the damping is similar.
2. Effect of core thickness on a sandwich structure: the CWS-1P/M3 structure (FIGS. 5A/5B) has a core 1.5 times thicker than the CWS-1P/M2 structure (FIGS. 4A/4B): its rigidity is increased and the damping is improved. It will be noted that the mass is little affected, since the efficiency of the transducer remains the same. This solution is especially well suited for a “piston stroke” operation in the bass range.
3. Comparative effect of number of plies on the outer skin and of core thickness on a structure with no inner skin:
The rigidity is similar; the thinner core (CWS-2P/M 1.5, FIGS. 6A/6B) covered with two outer plies exhibits better pulse behavior, while the CWS-1P/M3 structure (FIGS. 7A/7B) exhibits superior damping with a thicker core.
4. Comparison of a sandwich structure and a structure with no inner skin of the same core thickness:
A CWM-2 P/M 1.5 (FIGS. 9A/9B) is compared to a structure of the same core thickness having no inner skin, CWS-2P/M 1.5 (FIGS. 8A/8B).
The latter, with no inner skin, exhibits better controlled pulse behavior and damping. It is a choice particularly well suited for the medium range.
The best embodiment up to the present, and the most common version for a medium-range loudspeaker, consists of a core 1.5 mm thick with an outer skin of 10 microns produced from two plies of 50-micron glass.
In the case of a 33-cm woofer this core is 3 mm thick and has an inner skin of three 50-micron plies and an outer skin of two 50-micron plies.
The invention also applies to loudspeakers for acoustic baffles having a diaphragm as specified for the invention.
The invention also applies to acoustic baffles provided with at least one loudspeaker comprising a diaphragm as specified for the invention.
Lastly, the invention applies to all applications of such diaphragms, loudspeakers, and acoustic baffles for sound reproduction, specifically high or very high fidelity reproduction, for all private uses, in auditoriums, conference rooms, concert halls, motor vehicles, and other land transportation vehicles, maritime or air transportation vehicles, and the like.
The invention also covers all embodiments and all applications which may be understood immediately by the expert after reading this application, on the basis of his own knowledge, and optionally after conduct of simple routine tests.
| Number | Date | Country | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| 03/04420 | Apr 2003 | FR | national |
This application is a continuation of U.S. Ser. No. 10/551,955 filed Oct. 6, 2005, which is a 35 U.S.C. 371 National Phase Entry Application from PCT/FR04/00642 filed Mar. 16, 2004.
| Number | Date | Country | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Parent | 10551955 | Oct 2005 | US |
| Child | 12146902 | US |