Noise barrier

4228867
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Inventors

Wirt, Leslie S.

Application #

008817

Filed

Feb-2-1979

Published

Oct-21-1980

Current US Class

181/210
181/284
181/295
256/13.1
256/19
256/24

International Classes

G10K 011/00; B64F 001/26; E10F 015/00

Field of Search

181/210 181/295 181/284 181/285 244/114 256/24 256/73 256/19 256/13.1 256/14 256/1 256/65 105/452 104/1

Assignee

Lockheed Corporation (Burbank, CA)

Examiners

Hix; L. T.

Attorney, Agent or Firm

Smith; Frederic P.

US Patent References

3988009   Board-type fence
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4069768   Device for controlli...

Referenced by:

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Citation

Cite This Patent

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Abstract
A noise barrier wall having a transition area in the region of at least one unbounded edge and which employs controlled diffraction of sound to enhance the sound reducing properties thereacross. The transition area of the noise barrier is provided with either a row of absorptive shaped splitter panels, or a row of pickets, or other means of controlled transparency which provide acoustical shadowing equal to or greater than that of a solid wall for the frequency regions of interest.
 
Claims
What is claimed is:

1. An acoustical barrier for interposition between a noise and a noise receiver located within the acoustical shadow zone of the barrier, comprising:

a barrier member having an acoustically opaque base portion and having contiguous therewith an upwardly extending transition portion comprising a plurality of identical spaced apart elements contiguous with said base portion defining a plurality of flow ducts therebetween and each of such ducts having an effective path length which continuously decreases in said upwardly extending direction whereby the sound transmissibility between said elements follows a gradient and the sound transmitted between said elements tends to apply a phase opposition to the sound arriving at the noise receiver by refraction in the acoustical barrier through a region outside said shadow zone and thereby effectively redirect such refracted sound away from said noise receiver.



Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

Heretofore various types of sound barriers have been disclosed for attenuating noise emanating from a traffic area such as a highway. The simplest approach to prevent the transmission of traffic area noise to adjacent areas is the utilization of a simple wall or plate. Barriers consisting of a "plate" having elastic properties and a known thickness, affect a sound field by diffraction of sound waves around the barrier and by refraction and transmission of the sound waves. The latter two effects can be achieved with only limited success using conventional earthwork or solid, upright barriers. The diffracted sound field in the areas of the shadow zone of the barrier relative to the sound field in the absence of the barrier determines the overall effective attenuation. Prediction of the theoretical attenuation may be obtained by the well-known Fresnel integral equations.

It has been suggested that barriers be attributed with a maximum attenuation of 15 dB, due to the influence of diffraction effects over the barrier. With simple barriers, maximum noise level reductions appear to be achievable only at extreme wall heights (greater than 12 feet) and at the higher frequencies (greater than 1000 Hz).
 
  A noise barrier wall having a transition area in the region of at least one unbounded edge and which employs controlled diffraction of sound to enhance...  A noise reduction barrier is formed by connecting together a plurality of prefabricated vertically oriented panel members so configured that a hollow tubular...