TY - GEN
T1 - A demonstration of vibro-acoustic reciprocity, scale modeling, and panel contribution analysis
AU - Herrin, D. W.
AU - Cheng, G.
AU - Hua, X.
AU - Liu, J.
PY - 2014
Y1 - 2014
N2 - Panel contribution analysis is a rudimentary reconstruction technique in which the structure is first divided into patches. The volume velocity or sound intensity is measured for each patch, and the transfer function between a patch and a response point is measured or predicted. The contribution from a particular patch is the multiplication of the transfer function and the volume velocity. This technique was applied to two cases. In the first, the sound pressure level at a point 3 m away from a shaker-excited structure was compared with direct measurement. Transfer functions between sound pressure at the response point and the velocity of a patch were determined reciprocally. Equivalent transfer functions were also measured using a half-scale model and results were compared to those from a to-scale model with good agreement. In the second example, the technique was applied to a running generator set and the contribution from the engine, cooling fan, and muffler shell were assessed. The volume velocity and sound intensity were measured using a P-U probe and the sound pressure in the field was reconstructed assuming both correlated and uncorrected sources.
AB - Panel contribution analysis is a rudimentary reconstruction technique in which the structure is first divided into patches. The volume velocity or sound intensity is measured for each patch, and the transfer function between a patch and a response point is measured or predicted. The contribution from a particular patch is the multiplication of the transfer function and the volume velocity. This technique was applied to two cases. In the first, the sound pressure level at a point 3 m away from a shaker-excited structure was compared with direct measurement. Transfer functions between sound pressure at the response point and the velocity of a patch were determined reciprocally. Equivalent transfer functions were also measured using a half-scale model and results were compared to those from a to-scale model with good agreement. In the second example, the technique was applied to a running generator set and the contribution from the engine, cooling fan, and muffler shell were assessed. The volume velocity and sound intensity were measured using a P-U probe and the sound pressure in the field was reconstructed assuming both correlated and uncorrected sources.
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M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:84922602692
T3 - 21st International Congress on Sound and Vibration 2014, ICSV 2014
SP - 2537
EP - 2544
BT - 21st International Congress on Sound and Vibration 2014, ICSV 2014
T2 - 21st International Congress on Sound and Vibration 2014, ICSV 2014
Y2 - 13 July 2014 through 17 July 2014
ER -