This application is the U.S. national phase of PCT Application No. PCT/EP2016/070030 filed on Aug. 25, 2016, which claims priority to EP Patent Application No. 15186882.5 filed on Sep. 25, 2015, the disclosures of which are incorporated in their entirety by reference herein.
The disclosure relates to active road noise control systems and noise and vibration measurement methods.
Land based vehicles, when driven on roads and other surfaces, generate low frequency noise known as road noise. Even in modern vehicles, cabin occupants may be exposed to road noise that is transmitted through the structure, e.g. tires-suspension-body-cabin path, and through airborne paths, e.g. tires-body-cabin path, to the cabin. It is desirable to reduce the road noise experienced by cabin occupants. Active Noise, vibration, and harshness (NVH) control technologies, also known as active road noise control (RNC) systems, can be used to reduce these noise components without modifying the vehicle's structure as in active vibration technologies. However, active sound technologies for road noise cancellation may require very specific noise and vibration (N&V) sensor arrangements throughout the vehicle structure in order to observe road noise related noise and vibration signals.
An example active road noise control system includes a sensor arrangement configured to generate a primary sense signal representative of at least one of accelerations, motions and vibrations that occur at a first position on a vehicle body, the sense signal having an magnitude, and an active road noise control module configured to provide a noise reducing signal by processing the primary sense signal according to an adaptive mode of operation or a non-adaptive mode of operation at a time. The system further includes at least one loudspeaker configured to generate noise reducing sound at a second position within the vehicle body from the noise reducing signal, the at least one loudspeaker being disposed at a third position within the vehicle body, and an overload detection module configured to evaluate the primary sense signal and to control the active road noise control module so that the active road noise control module operates in the adaptive mode of operation when the magnitude of the primary sense signal undercuts a first threshold and operates in the non-adaptive mode of operation when the magnitude of the primary sense signal exceeds a second threshold, the first threshold being equal to or smaller than the second threshold.
An example active road noise control method includes generating with a sensor arrangement a primary sense signal representative of at least one of accelerations, motions and vibrations that occur at a first position on a vehicle body, wherein the sense signal has a magnitude, and providing a noise reducing signal by processing the primary sense signal according to an adaptive mode of operation or a non-adaptive mode of operation. The method further includes generating within the vehicle body noise reducing sound at the second position from the noise reducing signal, and evaluating the primary sense signal and controlling the processing of the primary sense signal so that the primary sense signal is processed in the adaptive mode of operation when the magnitude of the primary sense signal undercuts a first threshold and in the non-adaptive mode of operation when the magnitude of the primary sense signal exceeds a second threshold, the first threshold being equal to or smaller than the second threshold.
The disclosure may be better understood by reading the following description of non-limiting embodiments to the attached drawings, in which like elements are referred to with like reference numbers, wherein below:
Noise and vibration sensors provide reference inputs to active road noise control (RNC) systems, e.g., multichannel feedforward active RNC systems, as a basis for generating the anti-noise that reduces or cancels road noise. Noise and vibration sensors may include acceleration sensors such as accelerometers, force gauges, load cells, etc. For example, an accelerometer is a device that measures proper acceleration. Proper acceleration is not the same as coordinate acceleration, which is the rate of change of velocity. Single- and multi-axis models of accelerometers are available for detecting magnitude and direction of the proper acceleration, and can be used to sense orientation, coordinate acceleration, motion, vibration, and shock.
Airborne and structure-borne noise sources are monitored by the noise and vibration sensors, in order to provide the highest possible road noise reduction (cancellation) performance between 0 Hz and 1 kHz. For example, acceleration sensors used as input noise and vibration sensors may be disposed across the vehicle to monitor the structural behavior of the suspension and other axle components for global RNC. Above a frequency range that stretches from 0 Hz to approximately 500 Hz, acoustic sensors that measure the airborne road noise may be used as reference control inputs. Furthermore, one or more microphones may be placed in the headrest(s) in close proximity of the passenger's ears to provide an error signal or error signals in case of binaural reduction or cancellation. The feedforward filters are tuned or adapted to achieve maximum noise reduction or noise cancellation at both ears.
A simple single-channel feedforward active RNC system may be constructed as shown in
A transfer characteristic W(z) of a controllable filter 108 is controlled by an adaptive filter controller 109 which may operate according to the known least mean square (LMS) algorithm based on the error signal e(n) and on the road noise signal x(n) filtered with a transfer characteristic F′(z) by a filter 110, wherein W(z)=−P(z)/F(z). F′(z)=F(z) and F(z) represents the transfer function between a loudspeaker and the microphone 105. A signal y(n) having a waveform inverse in phase to that of the road noise audible within the cabin is generated by an adaptive filter formed at least by controllable filter 108 and filter controller 109, based on the thus identified transfer characteristic W(z) and the noise and vibration signal x(n). From signal y(n) a waveform inverse in phase to that of the road noise audible within the cabin is then generated by the loudspeaker 111, which may be arranged in the cabin, to thereby reduce the road noise within the cabin. The exemplary system described above employs an active RNC module 107 with a straightforward single-channel feedforward filtered-x LMS control structure for the sake of simplicity, but other control structures, e.g., multi-channel structures with a multiplicity of additional channels, a multiplicity of additional noise sensors 112, a multiplicity of additional microphones 113, and a multiplicity of additional loudspeakers 114, may be applied as well.
The system shown in
The system shown in
In conventional active RNC systems, overload of only one sensor can deteriorate the system performance significantly or can even give rise to unwanted audible artifacts. Therefore, in conventional systems a considerable sense signal headroom is provided which, however, reduces the usable dynamics of the sensors. Furthermore, the challenge for successful overload detection is how to proceed with this information other than just switching off the whole system. The decision on how to proceed may depend on information such as how many sensors exhibit an overload situation, which and what types of sensors exhibit overload situations, how significant the detected overload situations are, and what their specific effects on the system are. The exemplary overload detection modules 115 and 205 evaluate the overload status of the sensors, determine, based on their evaluations, whether one or more of the sensors exhibit an overload and, optionally, determine how severe the overload is.
An exemplary way to evaluate, determine and/or detect an overload situation is shown in
An exemplary overload detection and processing set-up as shown in
In the example illustrated in
Referring to
The active road noise control module 507 may include an adaptive filter 601 as described below in connection with
For example, adaptive filter 601 is in its adaptive mode when no overload is detected and may have, upon successful adaption, i.e., in a fully adapted state, a first transfer function. When subsequently the noise and vibration sensor 501 indicates an overload, the adaptive filter 601 is controlled to maintain (freeze) the first transfer function and to stop the adaptation process. After returning to a non-overload situation, the adaptive filter 601 starts adapting its transfer function again beginning at the first transfer function. When again an overload situation occurs, the adaptive filter 601 may have been adapted, for example, to a second transfer function. When at this point an overload is detected, the adaptive filter 601 is controlled to maintain (freeze) the second transfer function and to stop the adaptation process. Alternatively, when an overload situation is detected, the controllable filter 602 may be set to a default (predetermined) transfer function each time an overload is detected and the adaptation process may be stopped. When returning from a default setting to an adaptive mode of operation, the adaptive filter may be reset. In still another alternative, two overlapping predetermined ranges such as predetermined ranges 402 and 413 as described above in connection with
Referring to
Optionally as described further above, the method may further include generating a secondary sense signal representative of sound that occurs at the second position, and providing the noise reducing signal by processing the primary sense signal and the secondary sense signal. Another option may include providing a multiplicity of primary sense signals, and comparing the multiplicity of primary sense signals with a multiplicity of first and second thresholds and controlling the active road noise control module so that the method operates in the adaptive mode of operation when the magnitudes of a first number of primary sense signals undercut their respective first thresholds and operates in the non-adaptive mode of operation when the magnitudes of a second number of primary sense signals exceed their respective second thresholds. Adaptive filtering is performed with a variable transfer function, wherein, in another option, the non-adaptive mode of operation includes stopping the adaptation and maintaining the transfer function of the adaptive filter when stopping the adaptation, or in still another option, the non-adaptive mode of operation includes stopping the adaptation and setting the transfer function of the adaptive filter to a default transfer function. When returning from a default setting to an adaptive mode of operation, the adaptive filter may optionally be reset.
The description of embodiments has been presented for purposes of illustration and description. Suitable modifications and variations to the embodiments may be performed in light of the above description or may be acquired by practicing the methods. For example, unless otherwise noted, one or more of the described methods may be performed by a suitable device and/or combination of devices. The described methods and associated actions may also be performed in various orders in addition to the order described in this application, in parallel, and/or simultaneously. The described systems are exemplary in nature, and may include additional elements and/or omit elements.
As used in this application, an element or step recited in the singular and preceded by the word “a” or “an” should be understood as not excluding the plural of said elements or steps, unless such exclusion is stated. Furthermore, references to “one embodiment” or “one example” of the present disclosure are not intended to be interpreted as excluding the existence of additional embodiments that also incorporate the recited features. The terms “first,” “second,” and “third,” etc. are used merely as labels, and are not intended to impose numerical requirements or a particular positional order on their objects.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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15186882 | Sep 2015 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2016/070030 | 8/25/2016 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2017/050515 | 3/30/2017 | WO | A |
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