The present invention relates to the field of sound barriers, and more particularly, to sound barriers which include translucent or transparent glazing elements.
The need for the control of, inter alia, highway, railway, industrial and rapid transit noise in urban areas is well recognized, and sound barriers for this purpose are widely utilized.
One common sound barrier includes a plurality of vertically-extending, ground-mounted metal I-beam columns, having interleaved therebetween a plurality of wall panels. Exemplary in this regard is the sound barrier disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 4,325,457 (Docherty et al.), issued Apr. 20, 1982, which utilizes relatively light-weight cementitious panels. This sound barrier is known to be relatively inexpensive to manufacture and erect, and to provide acceptable levels of noise control. However, its wall panels, being cementitious, are completely opaque, and thereby block the transmission of light and the view of persons in the vicinity, which in certain circumstances can be undesirable, inter alia, from the standpoints of aesthetics and safety.
Large sheets of glass could, in principle, be used as wall panels in sound barriers. However, the cost of suitable glass, to wit, of sufficient strength to serve such purpose, is relatively high. Further, glass suffers from a propensity to shatter into sharp shards upon impact, thereby rendering it difficult and dangerous to work with, and unsuitable for use in situations wherein impacts could be expected, such as, for example, alongside highways.
Large sheets of synthetic transparent or translucent material that does not suffer from a propensity to shatter into sharp shards, such as acrylic or polycarbonate, are, in principle, also available for use as wall panels in sound barriers. However, not only is the cost of such materials relatively high, but, by virtue, inter alia, of the thermal expansion properties of available synthetic materials, it can be difficult to secure panels constructed therefrom to suitable supports. Moreover, supports that are constructed to accommodate panel movement during thermal expansion and contraction tend to increase the risk of withdrawal of the panels from their supports when the panels bow under wind or other loading; stiffening the panels against bowing by increasing their thickness adds detrimentally to cost and can impair light transmission, and similarly, increasing the size and complexity of the supports adds detrimentally to cost and can detract from the aesthetics of the wall. For reasons such as these, the use of transparent or translucent sheets of synthetic materials as wall panel components in sound barriers has been limited.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a transparent or translucent wall panel section for acoustical attenuation of a sound source that is relatively inexpensive to manufacture and erect.
This object, amongst others, is obtained by the present invention.
According to one aspect of the invention there is provided an improved panel section for use in a sound barrier for acoustical attenuation of a sound source.
The improved panel section is of the type: having a cementitious body portion; for use with at least two vertically-extending, ground-mounted I-beam columns, each such column having two parallel flanges and a transverse web extending therebetween and being positioned such that its web is substantially parallel to the web of each adjacent column and is substantially normal to a notional wall line defined by said columns; and disposed, in use, in respective vertically-stacked groupings to form one or more wall panels interleaved between adjacent pairs of columns, each wall panel having a pair of end edges disposed, one each, in mechanically-engaged relation, between the parallel flanges of a respective pair of adjacent columns.
The improvement comprises: the body portion having defined therethrough a window opening for permitting light transmission through said sound barrier in use; a glazing element adapted for light transmission; and fastening means for securing said glazing element to said body portion to occlude said window opening and to impede the passage of sound therethrough.
According to another aspect of the invention, an improved sound barrier is provided. The improved sound barrier is of the type having: at least two vertically-extending, ground-mounted I-beam columns, each such column having two parallel flanges and a transverse web extending therebetween and being positioned such that its web is substantially parallel to the web of each adjacent column and is substantially normal to a notional wall line defined by said columns; and a plurality of panel sections disposed in respective vertically-stacked groupings to form one or more wall panels interleaved between adjacent pairs of columns, each wall panel having a pair of end edges disposed, one each, in mechanically-engaged relation, between the parallel flanges of a respective pair of adjacent columns.
The improvement comprises: at least one of said panel sections being an improved panel section including a cementitious body portion having defined therethrough a window opening for permitting the passage of light through said sound barrier; a glazing element adapted for light transmission; and fastening means for securing said glazing element to said body portion to occlude said window opening and to impede the passage of sound therethrough.
Other advantages, features and characteristics of the present invention, as well as methods of operation and functions of the related elements of the structure, and the combination of parts and economies of manufacture, will become more apparent upon consideration of the following detailed description and the appended claims with reference to the accompanying drawings, the latter of which is briefly described hereinbelow.
In the accompanying drawings, which are for the purpose of illustration and description only, and are not intended as a definition of the limits of the invention:
Referring to
With general reference to
As best seen in
Each panel section 36,38 comprises a cementitious body portion 44 including a first layer 46 and a second layer 48 joined as two laminae, as seen representatively in
The first layer 46 comprises mineralized organic fibrous material blended with cement, specifically, mineralized and neutralized softwood shavings blended with Portland cement, and acts as a sound-attenuating panel because it absorbs sound. As illustrated the first layer 46 of each panel section 38 is preferably provided with a decorative pattern to resemble a natural stone wall. The second layer 48 comprises a fine aggregate concrete, and being more dense than the first layer 46, acts as a barrier to the transmission of sound.
Each panel section 36,38 preferably further comprises reinforcing steel 80 encased in the body portion 44 thereof, as shown in
As will be evident from a review of the illustrations, the panel sections 36,38 assume two general types.
Panel sections of the first type 36 are of conventional construction, and can be disposed in respective vertically-stacked groups to form conventional wall panels (not shown) which may be interleaved within columns in the manner aforementioned to form a conventional sound barrier (not shown) of the common type described in the Docherty et al. patent referenced in the background portion of this patent disclosure.
Panel sections of the second type 38 are improved relative to those of the first type 36 and form part of the present invention; panel sections of this second type are hereinafter referred to as improved panel sections 38.
As aspects of said improvement, the body portion 44 of each improved panel section 38 has a window opening 50 defined therethrough for permitting light transmission through said sound barrier in use, and in the preferred embodiment illustrated, has a glaze-receiving surface 52 peripherally surrounding said window opening 50, as best seen in
As other aspects, each improved panel section 38 has a transparent glazing element 54 adapted for light transmission and, in the preferred embodiment illustrated, a resilient gasket 56 for each glazing element 54, the gasket 56 encasing the periphery of the glazing element 54 and abutting glaze-receiving surface 52, such that the glazing element 54 has its periphery in operative abutment with the glaze-receiving surface 52. The glazing element 54 of the preferred embodiment illustrated is a 15 mm clear transparent acrylic sheet, of the type sold by ROEHM GMBH & CO. KG, of Germany, in association with the trademark PARAGLAS™.
As other aspects of the improvement, a fastening means, designated with general reference 58 in
The locking framework 60 comprises a pair of square tubes 62 and a pair of angles 64. The square tubes 62 are secured to the body portion 44 by concrete screws 66 to mechanically retain, in sandwiching relation, in combination with the glaze-receiving surface 52, side edge portions 68 of the glazing element 54 and portions of the gasket 56 contiguous therewith; the pair of angles 64 is secured, also by screws 66, to body portion 44 to mechanically retain, in sandwiching relation, in combination with said glaze-receiving surface 52, vertically-spaced upper 70 and lower 72 edge portions of said glazing element 54 and portions of the gasket 56 contiguous therewith. Such sandwiching relation is best illustrated in
In addition to the columns 26 and panel sections 36,38 described above, the improved sound barrier 20 further includes, as illustrated in
While but a single preferred embodiment of the present invention is shown and illustrated, it will be evident that various modifications may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
For example, whereas in the preferred embodiment illustrated, three (3) improved panel sections 38 are employed in combination with three (3) conventional panel sections 36 and three (3) columns 26, it should be understood that the invention is not so limited; a wall according to the present invention could readily be constructed out of any desirable number of columns, and solely from improved panel sections or from other combinations of conventional panel sections and improved panel sections (not shown).
Further, such combinations may be readily and conveniently tailored to meet the needs of any given installation. For example, in circumstances wherein sound attenuation was of foremost concern, and wherein light transmission was of secondary concern, a wall could be constructed with only a few improved panel sections interspersed throughout in an aesthetically pleasing arrangement. Alternatively, in circumstances wherein light transmission was of foremost concern, improved panel sections could be utilized exclusively in thee construction of the wall. Thus, the present invention provides a highly flexible sound barrier wall system having transparent or translucent panels that is completely modular in nature.
Moreover, such combinations may be modified from time to time, as needs change. For example, a sound barrier according to the present invention could be constructed alongside a highway, for sound attenuation purposes, which included improved panel sections only in the area of an on-ramp, to improve safety for vehicular traffic; if, over time, dwellings were constructed on the quiet side of the wall, and demanded more light, improved panel sections could be readily substituted from time to time.
Additionally, whereas in the preferred embodiment. illustrated panel sections 36,38 are disposed in use in vertically stacked groups to form wall panels 24, this use is not exhaustive; for example, a single improved panel section, suitably sized, could itself serve a wall panel (not shown).
Further, whereas in the preferred embodiment illustrated, the body portion of each panel section includes only two laminae, it is of course possible to construct a panel section such that the mineralized fibrous material blended with cement is disposed on both sides of a layer of fine aggregate concrete (not shown). A sound barrier constructed from such panel sections (not shown) would tend to absorb noise from both sides, and would continue to reduce the transmission of sound because of the dense central layer. Sound absorption qualities of the sound barrier, of course, may also be tailored through the selection of a distribution of improved panel sections and conventional panel sections, so as to provide any desired ratio of exposed glazing element and absorptive material, and also through modification to the relative proportion of the glazing elements in the improved panel sections.
As well, whereas the columns of the preferred embodiment illustrated take the form of metal I-beams, it will be evident that the columns may be of any suitable material and be of any suitable cross-sectional shape, for example a wide-flange beam, paired channels or paired box sections.
Further, whereas in the preferred embodiment, Portland cement is blended with neutralized and mineralized fibrous material to form the first layer of each panel section, various other binders may be used, such as organic or inorganic cements, hydraulic cements, hydraulic limes, porous binders, as well as other adhesives or glues.
Additionally, whereas the panel sections of the preferred embodiment are constructed in part from softwood shavings, other fibrous material may be utilized, such as hardwood shavings. Vegetable or textile fibres, for example, sugarcane (bagasse), coco fibres, parts of palms, various grasses, cereal plants, plant fibres, reed, papyrus and other sedges, lofas and similar vegetable material as well as inorganic fibres and aggregates, for example, asbestos, glass wool, rock wool and vermiculite could also be used.
Where organic material is used it must be mineralized and neutralized if noxious components exist therein which would adversely affect the binding quality of the cement.
Finally, whereas the glazing element of the preferred embodiment takes the form of a clear transparent acrylic sheet, it will be appreciated that other materials may be utilized, and that the glazing element need not be clear nor transparent, and could, for example, be translucent and/or tinted, if so desired.
In view of such possible modifications, it should therefor be understood that the scope of the present invention is limited only by the accompanying claims, purposively construed.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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4214411 | Pickett | Jul 1980 | A |
4325457 | Docherty et al. | Apr 1982 | A |
4779324 | Sandor, Sr. | Oct 1988 | A |
5406039 | Rerup et al. | Apr 1995 | A |
5984044 | Christensen | Nov 1999 | A |
6553733 | Hock et al. | Apr 2003 | B1 |
20050178613 | Humphries et al. | Aug 2005 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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07018632 | Jan 1995 | JP |
09041329 | Feb 1997 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20050284059 A1 | Dec 2005 | US |