This invention relates generally to headphones and in particular to in-ear earphones. Other embodiments are also described.
Whether listening to an MP3 player while traveling, or to a hi-fi stereo system at home, consumers are increasingly choosing the in-ear earphone for their listening pleasure. Although these acoustic devices have a relatively low profile, which provides convenience, they are also able to provide good sound quality. An in-ear earphone, also referred to as an earbud, is designed to be inserted partially into an ear canal so as to create an airtight seal against the inner surface of the canal. This provides the wearer with good acoustic isolation against external sounds. However, if the wearer were to ride up in an elevator while listening to the earphone, the resulting sudden drop in outside (barometric) pressure may cause the in-ear phone to stop playing. This may be explained as follows.
Consider a typical in-ear earphone that has a receiver case in which a motor is connected to a diaphragm. Note the reference to “receiver” here, which is a type of driver that is designed to be small enough and have the appropriate sound pressure output levels for use in an earphone. An electrical audio signal that is applied to the motor causes the diaphragm to move and thereby create sound pressure, which is directed out of a main sound output port of the earphone (and into the user's ear). The diaphragm has one side (inside the receiver case) that is open to the main sound port, and another that seals the receiver case airtight. When the barometric pressure drops, the air pressure inside the receiver case against the side of the diaphragm that is open to the sound port will also drop, due to “gasket leakage” past the seal made with the ear canal. However the pressure on the sealed side of the diaphragm does not equalize as quickly, thereby causing the diaphragm to “stick” so that no sound is being produced. To avoid this undesirable effect, the diaphragm is manufactured with a calibrated airflow hole, also referred to as a barometric vent hole. The hole is sized to allow the pressures on both sides of the diaphragm to equalize quickly, so as to reduce the likelihood that the diaphragm will be held stuck in the event of a sudden barometric pressure change. But the hole will adversely affect the acoustic response of the receiver and cause the sound output capability to drop somewhat. On balance however, the performance reduction caused by the hole has been tolerated given its beneficial effect on the overall practicality of the earphone.
An embodiment of the invention is an earphone whose housing has a sound output port to be inserted into an ear. There are at least two drivers located in the housing. Each of the drivers has a respective motor and a respective diaphragm. The diaphragm one driver is vented but that of the other is not. Closing the hole in the diaphragm of the latter driver increases its efficiency to achieve more sound output. Small drivers or receivers that fit within an earphone housing are typically not known to provide significant bass output. Thus, by dosing the hole in the diaphragm of a woofer, for example, an embodiment of the invention may improve woofer output in such a multiple receiver system.
In another embodiment, the earphone has at least two receivers that may be essentially identical physically, and that acoustically reinforce each other while being operated in parallel over a relatively wide frequency range. One of the receivers is “burdened” with the duty of barometric venting (its diaphragm is vented), but the other is not. This allows the latter's sound output or efficiency to increase relative to that of the other (within their frequency and/or sound pressure level range of operation). Such a technique may be used to enhance bass boost, or contour the bass performance, of the earphone as a whole. Other embodiments are also described.
The above summary does not include an exhaustive list of all aspects of the present invention. Indeed, the inventor contemplates that the invention 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 of the invention 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 of the invention 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 invention 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 invention is not limited only to the parts shown, which are meant merely for the purpose of illustration.
Each driver converts its input electrical signal through actuation of its diaphragm by way of its motor, into sound pressure waves. These are guided through the respective sound output port 119, 117, in this case into the chamber 107 inside the housing and then onward through the housing sound output port 104. The drivers 106, 108 may be fixed in position relative to and inside the housing 102. The orientation of the drivers 106, 108, the shape of the chamber 107 and the shape and materials of its interior walls and passages should be designed to promote the quality of sound heard by the wearer of the earphone 100. The sound pressure waves are delivered through housing output port 104 into the wearer's ear 109 and onward through the ear canal and onto the wearer's ear drum (not shown).
The venting system assists in providing barometric relief to the earphone in
The diaphragm 113 has a barometric vent hole 115 therein, which allows it to maintain a better range of motion even during periods of sudden barometric pressure changes, while the earphone 100 is being worn. The vent hole 115 is a relatively small hole that should be engineered or tuned to provide sufficiently rapid relief from abrupt atmospheric or barometric pressure changes, e.g. such as those that occur when the wearer is flying in an airplane that is changing altitude or riding in a moving elevator, while not losing too much performance or efficiency from the driver 108. The vent hole 115 serves to equalize the pressure on the front side and back side of the diaphragm 113, during such barometric pressure changes. The airflow required is relatively small and may be similar to that of gasket leakage. The hole may be created in the diaphragm through a calibrated piercing operation (e.g., using a laser beam) that precisely controls the size of the opening. At the same time, however, the diaphragm 111 of the other driver is intact in that it does not have a hole that would typically provide similar pressure equalization.
Referring now to the driver 108, its diaphragm 113 may be viewed as essentially splitting an interior space within the housing 102 into at least two portions—sound port 119 opens into a front portion, while a rear portion opens to a vent hole 120. As described below in connection with
Referring now to the driver 106, its diaphragm 111 may be viewed as essentially splitting an interior space within the housing 102 into at least two portions—a front portion into which the sound port 117 opens, and a rear portion. The rear portion opens to a vent hole 122. This vent hole, as described below in connection with
Although not explicitly shown in
In one embodiment, the driver 106 is a low frequency driver, while the driver 108 is a high frequency driver. The terms “low” and “high” here are used not in their absolute sense but merely relative to each other. Examples of tuned low frequency and high frequency drivers include: at least one woofer and one tweeter; at least one woofer and one midrange; at least one midrange and one tweeter; or another combination of at least one tuned low frequency driver and at least one tuned high frequency driver.
Turning now to
Also contained in the housing 102 is a further receiver case 306 in which the motor 110 and diaphragm 111 are located. These may be tuned to perform as a low frequency driver, for example. The sound output port 117 is formed in a front wall of the case 306 as shown, and is acoustically coupled to the front side of the diaphragm 111. The diaphragm 111 may be viewed as essentially splitting an interior space of the case 306 into at least two portions, a front portion into which the sound port 117 opens, and a rear portion. The rear portion opens to the vent hole 122 formed, in this case, in the wall of the case 306.
The vent holes 120, 122 are connected to each other by one or more air or vent paths within the housing, which may or may not be open to the atmosphere. In this case,
Still referring to
The combined sound output of the multiple receivers, delivered through the port 329 of the spout 328, is further guided by the chamber 107, to the housing sound output port 104 at the far end portion of the housing 102. In this case, an ear tip or cap 330 has been fitted to the far end portion of the housing as shown. The tip 330 may be made of a flexible material such as silicone or gel material. It is shaped and sized as shown to allow the wearer to squeeze its outside surface while inserting into the ear 109, and then the ear canal 332, to thereby make an airtight seal all around the outside surface 334 which is in contact with the surface of the ear canal 332. Multiple tips 330 each of a different outer diameter and/or of a different outer surface shape can be supplied for a single earphone, to suit different types of ears.
There are several variations possible for the arrangement of
In another embodiment, depicted in
Referring now to
The invention is not limited to the specific embodiments described above. For example, in contrast to a hearing aid which produces an electrical audio signal from a built-in pickup and then converts the electrical signal to sound waves, the driver in an earphone 100 (that is in accordance with an embodiment of the invention) receives its input electrical signal directly from an external amplifier. As depicted in
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20090220113 A1 | Sep 2009 | US |