The invention relates generally to the field of ultrasound and nonlinear acoustics. More particularly, in various embodiments, the invention relates to the generation of hyper-directional sound beams and to steering the hyper-directional sound beams to a desired location.
There are a number of different circumstances in which it is desirable to deliver a tightly focused sound beam to a particular location. One useful application is, for example, in advertising to prevent interference and confusion for listeners who hear mixed signals from different broadcasting sources. Higher power sound beams could be used, for example, for public announcements by targeting certain locations or groups of people during demonstrations or open air events. Sound beams with even higher power could be employed to induce physical discomfort in a person or to cause damage in livestock and property.
Hyper-directional sound beams can be produced by driving an acoustic source, such as a single acoustic transducer or an array of acoustic transducers, with a signal consisting of a high-frequency (ultrasonic) carrier wave that is modulated with a low-frequency sound signal. The high-frequency component of the sound wave is absorbed within a short distance from the acoustic source due to self-demodulation on passage through the transmission medium, such as air, leaving only a low-frequency waveform that is related to the modulation signal and that propagates at the speed of sound within the beam defined by the high-frequency signal.
The sound beams produced by the above technique may be focused, steered or projected in a defined area or direction, for example, by rotating or oscillating the acoustic transducer or by making use of digital beam-forming techniques employing phased arrays. The high-frequency audio signal is also not audible prior to demodulation.
While the foregoing arrangements are adequate for a number of applications, there is still a need for a method and system able to efficiently generate a high-power hyper-directional sound beam, and more particularly a sound beam, which produces a time-averaged non-zero sound pressure gradient and a time-averaged non-zero sound pressure force field at a location of a stationary or moving object to exert a net force on the object.
The invention addresses the deficiencies of the prior art by, in various embodiments, providing methods and systems for generating a high-power, hyper-directional sound beam and for controllably steering the sound beam to produce a pressure force field at a location of a stationary or moving object, which can exert a net force on the object.
According to one aspect, the invention provides a directional sound projector with a dielectric sound radiator having a base, a dielectric layer disposed on the base, and a conductive layer disposed on the dielectric layer. The sound radiator has a mechanical resonance frequency in an ultrasonic frequency range. The directional sound projector further includes a drive circuit, which applies a drive voltage between the base and the conductive layer for driving the sound radiator at a drive frequency within a range of frequencies including one half of the mechanical resonance frequency. The sound projector also includes a modulator for modulating the drive voltage with a modulation signal having a modulation frequency in an audible frequency range.
According to another aspect, the invention provides a system for applying a unidirectional pressure gradient to an object. The system includes a sound projector producing a directional low frequency sound beam that is self-demodulated from an ultrasonic carrier signal, a beam steering device that steers the directional beam toward the object, and a controller that controls the beam steering device to cause the sound projector to apply a pressure gradient to the object.
According to yet another aspect, the invention provides a method of applying a unidirectional pressure gradient across an object by generating an ultrasonic carrier signal, modulating the carrier signal with a low frequency signal, applying the modulated carrier signal to a sound projector, and steering the sound projector alternatingly towards opposing sides of the object at a frequency that depends on the frequency of the low frequency signal.
Embodiments of the invention may include one or more of the following features. The audible frequency range may encompass frequencies between about 0.1 Hz and about 20 kHz, or between about 1 Hz and about 10 kHz, or between about 10 Hz and about 500 Hz. The sound projector may include a detector coupled to the sound radiator for generating a feedback signal indicative of the mechanical resonance frequency. It may also include a controller for receiving the feedback signal and controlling the drive circuit to apply the drive frequency at one half of the mechanical resonance frequency. The sound projector may include a steering device for changing the orientation of the sound projector, and/or an array of sound transducers, with the beam steering device changing, for example, the phase of modulation signals applied to the transducers.
According to one feature, the object to which the sound pressure is applied is moving on a trajectory relative to the sound projector, and the controller controls the beam steering device based on the object's measured trajectory. In another embodiment, the pressure gradient across the object is substantially unidirectional with a direction that is substantially constant over a predetermined period of time. In one configuration, to apply the pressure gradient across the object, the sound projector is synchronized with movement of the moving object and steered in alternating directions with a frequency that is approximately twice the frequency of the low frequency signal, corrected for the speed of the moving object.
Further features and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the following description of illustrative embodiments and from the claims.
These and other features and advantages of the invention will be more fully understood by the following illustrative description with reference to the appended drawings, in which like elements are labeled with like reference designations and which may not be to scale.
The invention, in various embodiments, provides systems, methods and devices for efficiently producing a hyper-directional, high-intensity sound beam, and more particularly systems, methods and devices that employ a hyper-directional sound beam to exert a net force on an object.
The performance of the exemplary sound projector 10 can be calculated from equations of motion for the mechanical components and from electrical mesh equations for the projector connected in series with a fixed inductor (not shown) for improving the input drive power factor.
The equations of motion of the top sheet 16 can be written in terms of the instantaneous thickness x of the dielectric sheet 14, which is expands and contracts due to the electrostatic force generated between the base 12 and the top layer 16. Without an applied electric charge, x=td.
where M is the mass of the radiating sheet, Rm is the mechanical viscous resistance of dielectric, Rr is the radiation resistance on the radiating sheet, k is the mechanical stiffness of the dielectric sheet, Re is the electrical resistance of connecting wires, L is the aforementioned series inductance, I is the electric current driving the projector and Q is the electrical charge on the plates. v is the “piston velocity” of the sound projector, i.e. the rate of deflection of the top layer 16 in the direction 18 of the sound beam.
Hyper-directional audible sound beams can be generated by modulating the high-frequency ultrasonic drive voltage VAC (carrier signal), which is tuned to excite a mechanical resonance in the projector 10, with a periodic low-frequency envelope function E(t) in the range of, for example, several Hz to several hundred Hz, generating a primary axial beam with a pressure field p(r, 0, t) of
where p0 is the carrier signal amplitude, ω0 is the carrier frequency, and a represents an effective dimension of the radiating surface 16 of the sound projector 10. However, depending on the particular application, useful envelope frequencies may be less than several Hertz or greater than several hundred Hertz, as long as the low-frequency component in the hyper-directional ultrasonic sound beam is not significantly attenuated. Attenuation of sound waves is, inter alia, proportional to the square of the sound frequency. The frequency range of the low-frequency envelope function will also be referred to as “audible frequency range,” although a particular frequency may not be perceived by the human ear.
With E(t) varying slowly in comparison with sin(ω0t) and with strong absorption in the atmosphere (α0*z0>1), an approximate quasi-linear solution for the axial pressure in the beam is given by
is the dissipation function for a thermo-viscous fluid and the asterisk (*) designates convolution with respect to time, and f(t)=E(t)·sin ω0t. The high-frequency component (ω0) is absorbed within the near-field (z/a<), with only a distorted replica of the envelope E(t) remaining in the far-field. For α0−1<<z<<αE−1 and
the far-field waveform becomes:
where β(≅1.2 in air) is a parameter that characterizes the nonlinear propagation. α0 is the sound absorption parameter at the high (ultrasonic) frequency ω0, αE is the sound absorption parameter at the envelope frequency ωE, ρ is the air mass density, c0 is the speed of sound, and z denotes distance from the sound projector along the beam.
The far-field pressure pulses then have a waveform proportional to the second derivative of the square of the envelope function, i.e.
The resulting far-field waveform then becomes
The following examples provide design parameters for a dielectric sound projector 10, which when driven by a carrier signal that excites a mechanical resonance of the projector, can produce a sound pressure of between about 3 kPa and about 5 kPa. The two exemplary sound projectors share the following common parameters:
where Qm is a quality factor related to the sharpness of the mechanical resonance of the sound projector.
Currently available dielectric materials have quality factors of Qm=10 or less. Neoprene rubber with an elastic modulus of about 8.6 MPa and a breakdown field strength of 20 MV/cm can be used as a dielectric material in layer 14. With a drive voltage V0=2000 Volt, a projector capacitance of about 350 nF, and an inductance of about 0.88 mH, the projector operates at a maximum dielectric strength of about 4 MV/cm, i.e., well below the breakdown field.
As mentioned above, the overall electro-acoustic power conversion efficiency increases with the quality factor Qm.
It has been observed that, for the same quality factor Qm=100, the envelope self-modulation can be substantially eliminated by lowering the drive voltage to V0=200 V. However, lowering the drive voltage also reduces the sound pressure amplitude from about 3 kPa in
Systems with a large quality factor Qm may require that the frequency and phase of the ultrasonic drive signal be precisely tuned to the mechanical resonance of the system and maintained during operation. It may therefore be necessary to monitor the motion of the driven electro-acoustic transducer and use the monitored signal as feedback to control the drive signal.
In one application, hyper-directional sound beams can be directed to specific areas, for example, in public settings to convey advertising and informational material to a limited audience. High intensity hyper-directional sound beams, such as sound beams produced with the illustrative sound projector 10 of
In another application, high intensity hyper-directional sound beams can be used to subject a target to a pressure gradient and thereby a force. For example, a peak pressure of about 170 Pa can be produced at a distance of 30 m from the sound projector 10 operating at or near resonance at a carrier frequency of ω0=10 kHz and an envelope modulation frequency of ωE=85 Hz. The wavelength of this radiation is equal to 8 m, which is much larger than the dimensions of the human body. The resulting force on the body, assuming a volume of 1 m3, is equal to the product of pressure gradient times the volume, or about 520 N, which would induce significant discomfort in the person.
In yet another application depicted in
The direction and timing of the hyper-directional sound beam emanating from the sound projector 64 must be synchronized with the movement of the target. The sound projector 64 steering angle θ needed to radiate the positive pressure phase to one side and the negative pressure phase to the other side of the target 62a increases with time because the target locations 62b, 62c, 62d are getting closer to the sound projector 64. Assuming that the target is detected at time τ=0 at a distance R0 and moves toward the sound projector 64 with a velocity V. The steering angle θ(τ) then becomes:
where M is the Mach number of the target. As seen from eq. (7), the timing of the steering angle θ also depends on the envelope modulation frequency ωE, which may be adjusted accordingly.
As shown in
It will be understood that mechanical beam steering or phased-array beam steering can be used separately or in combination. As also seen in
While the invention has been disclosed in connection with the preferred embodiments shown and described in detail, various modifications and improvements may be made thereto without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. By way of example, although the illustrative embodiments have been described in conjunction with applying a net pressure to a stationary or moving object, this need not be the case. Instead, the hyper-directional sound beams may be used for non-lethal crowd control while avoiding collateral damage to bystanders. Moreover, because the method and systems rely on self-demodulation of an ultrasonic sound beam, the sound appears to emanate from empty space, making it difficult to detect the location of the sound projector. Accordingly, the spirit and scope of the present invention is to be limited only by the following claims.
This invention was made with government support under Contract Number HR0011-04-C-0086, awarded by the DARPA. The Government has certain rights in the invention.