The present invention relates to the absorption of sound waves by means of textile plies suspended or stretched with a space formed behind, of at least a few millimeters and having no upper limit.
The invention more specifically aims at such open-worked textile plies formed by the weaving of coated yams, and having openings capable of trapping sound waves.
Generally, such textile plies have openings, to enable the sound wave to pass through the stretched textile ply.
Indeed, and as described in document FR-2875821, it is known to use glass yarns coated with a thermoplastic material to form an open-worked fabric having an openness factor in the range between 0.5 and 6%.
However, such a type of sound-absorbing fabric is defined by its openness factor. Thus, the openings are thus seen as through openings without considering their spatial orientation and their openness rate may be appreciated with a microscope. Further, it is also known to form a fabric with an openness rate predetermined by calendering of a fabric having a greater openness factor. Such a calendering results in flattening the fabric and accordingly in decreasing the spatial orientation of each opening.
Thus, such openings may be capable of absorbing sound waves having an incidence normal to the plane of the textile ply while appearing to be rather inefficient for sound waves having a low or grazing angle of incidence.
Further, prior art fabrics are characterized by their openness factor. This parameter is useful, but not sufficient to optimize the absorption performance of a fabric. Indeed, sound propagation in a volume is diffuse, and thus, by definition, formed of waves having a great variety of angles of incidence on the textile ply. Thus, sound waves having a normal incidence, that is, an angle of incidence close to 90° relative to the fabric plane, may cross conventional through openings of the fabrics only defined by their openness factor. However, such holes are not accessible to sound waves having a variety of orientations and angles of incidence.
Thus, the invention aims at generating ports into which sound waves having a variety of orientations and a low angle of incidence can penetrate and are no longer reflected by the textile ply.
The invention thus relates to a textile ply formed by the weaving of yams coated with a thermoplastic substance, such coated yarns or groups of coated yams being spaced apart from one another in both the warp and weft direction to form openings referred to as “intersection” openings arranged at the intersections between warp yarns and weft yarns. Such a textile ply is intended to allow a sound wave absorption.
According to the invention, such a textile ply is characterized in that it comprises, in the warp and/or in the weft direction, a plurality of groups of at least two juxtaposed coated yams having a same weaving direction, such yams of a same group being locally spaced apart from each other and forming a plurality of openings referred to as “parallel” openings each having a shape and an angular orientation different from those of “inter-section” openings.
The “intersection” openings associated with the “parallel” openings provide a so-called “3-dimensional” porosity. Such ports having a variety of spatial orientations enable to efficiently absorb diffuse waves.
Such a “3-dimensional” porosity cannot be characterized by a simple openness factor measured with a microscope and seen in a plane. This is in particular due to the fact that the openness factor seen with the microscope with a normal incidence cannot take into account openings having grazing angles of incidence. To characterize such a 3D porosity and to take into account all openings, and in particular “parallel” openings, the air permeability of the textile ply may be measured. The sound wave being an air pressure wave, the permeability to air better represents the accessibility to sound waves in the 3 dimensions of space.
Advantageously, the textile ply may comprise in the warp and/or in the weft direction a number of yarns per centimeter in the range between 8 and 24, and more specifically in the range between 12 and 20.
In practice, the yams may comprise a core formed by strands made of a material selected from the group comprising polyester, polyamide, polyolefin, acrylic, vinyl, and glass.
Such materials are highly resistant and thus enable to ease the weaving of the textile ply, while guaranteeing an optimal mechanical behavior of the textile ply and a tearing resistance. Such materials also enable to from large textile plies, in particular capable of covering a ceiling or a wall by means of frames and of a peripheral stretching system such as straps or cables. They may also be used as acoustic baffles suspended to the ceiling.
According to a specific embodiment, the linear mass density of the yarn core may be in the range between 250 and 1,100 dtex.
Further, the yarns coated with the thermoplastic substance may have a linear mass density between 1,000 and 4,000 dtex.
Such characteristics indeed enable to provide the textile ply with a specific resistance measured according to standard ISO 9053, method A, or NF EN ISO 29053, method A, in the range between 100 and 1,100 N.s.m-3 or Pa.s.m-1 or also Rayls.
Advantageously, the thermoplastic substance of the coatings may be made of a material selected from the group comprising polyvinyl chloride (PVC), ethylene vinyl acetate (EVA), silicones, acrylic, and polyurethane.
The use of a PVC coating advantageously enables to recycle the textile ply according to a currently used recycling process.
In practice, the thermoplastic substance of the coatings may be made of a material such as open-cell foam.
According to a specific embodiment, the textile ply may comprise, on at least one of its surfaces, an added layer of material taking part in the sound wave absorption.
Such a layer of material can thus be installed according to different methods such as for example flocking or pasting. The added layer of material may appear in the form of a nonwoven textile ply such as a felt, an open-cell foam or also hair.
Such a textile may reach alone a weighted sound absorption coefficient alpha w of at least 0.6 with an air gap of 10 cm behind it and capable of reaching 0.90 with added layers of material.
The way to implement the present invention, as well as the resulting advantages, will better appear from the description of the following non-limiting embodiment, given as an indication, based on the accompanying drawings, among which:
As already mentioned, the invention relates to a textile ply capable of absorbing sound waves and formed by the weaving of yams coated with a thermoplastic substance.
As shown in
Further, and as shown in
Further, such a textile ply 10 also comprises openings referred to as “parallel” openings 18 and 19, arranged between two parallel juxtaposed warp yarns and having the same weaving direction. In other words, juxtaposed warp yams 12, 13 are maintained apart from each other during the operation of weaving of textile ply 10. Such openings 18 and 19 thus comprise a geometry and an angular arrangement different from “intersection” openings 16, 17.
Further, with a significant shrinkage, openings 18, 19 may orient substantially laterally to enable to capture grazing sound waves, that is, of low incidence relative to the surface of the textile ply.
As shown in
On the contrary, according to the invention and as shown in
Further, in a plane perpendicular to that of
Accordingly, the textile ply according to the invention enables to absorb sound waves having a variety of orientations and incidences both in the plane of
Further, as shown in
According to another embodiment and as shown in
As shown in
Hair 44 may in particular have a 20-μm diameter and a 200-μm length. Such a layer 41 of material thus enables to improve sound wave absorption.
Similarly and as shown in
As appears from the foregoing, the textile ply according to the invention has many advantages, and in particular:
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1156193 | Jul 2011 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/FR2012/051358 | 6/16/2012 | WO | 00 | 12/9/2013 |