Sound absorber for motor vehicles

5681072
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Inventors

Stricker, Klaus

Application #

419993

Filed

Apr-11-1995

Published

Oct-28-1997

Current US Class

181/205
181/290
181/291
296/198
296/39.3

International Classes

B62D 025/16

Field of Search

296/39.3 296/198 280/847 280/848 280/849 280/850 280/851 181/198 181/205 181/284 181/290 181/291

Assignee

Georg Naher GmbH (Markgroeninger, DE)

Examiners

Pike; Andrew C.

Attorney, Agent or Firm

Nath; Gary M. Nath & Associates

US Patent References

4013302   Acoustically absorb...
4313524   Bulk acoustic absor...

Referenced by:

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Citation

Cite This Patent

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Abstract
A sound absorber for motor vehicles is constructed in the form of a double-wall, flat resonant body (1) with a perforated front wall (3) facing the noise source and a substantially unperforated rear wall (4). The sound absorber is constructed as a combined plate/perforated resonator and is able to absorb both high and lower frequencies.
 
Claims
I claim:

1. Sound absorber for motor vehicles comprising:

a double-wall, resonant body, said body having

a vibratable front wall with a plurality of holes,

a substantially unperforated rear wall, and

a single cavity free from acoustic partitions that is shared by all of the holes, said single cavity being defined by said front wall and said rear wall;

wherein the sound absorber acts as a combined plate/perforated resonator.

2. Sound absorber according to claim 1, wherein a total area of the plurality of holes is kept so small compared with a surface area of the front wall that only a part of an absorbed sound energy is dissipated in the holes, whereas another part of the sound energy is dissipated by vibrations of the front wall.



Description
BACKGROUND

The invention relates to a sound absorber for motor vehicles in the form of a double-wall, flat resonant body having a front wall with numerous holes and a substantially unperforated rear wall.

Noises caused by motor vehicles are a problem which is becoming increasingly urgent with the rise in traffic density. On one side an attempt is being made to design vehicles in such a way that avoidable noise does not occur, whilst on the other side an attempt is being made to eliminate unavoidable noise by suitable soundproofing measures in the vicinity of their formation point.

German Patent DE 36 15 360 C2 and European patent EP 454 949 A2 disclose flat, sound-damping elements, which are constructed as Helmholtz resonators. The sound-damping elements are preferably used as engine shielding or compartmentalization means. As a rule the resonators comprise a double-wall plate element, in which a perforated plate faces the sound generator, e.g., an engine, and an unperforated plate remote from the sound generator serves as the rear wall. Individual or groups of holes in the perforated plate are associated with acoustically separated chambers in the area between the two plates and which form the resonant chambers. Different sizes of chambers give resonance and therefore sound damping in different frequency ranges, so that a relatively wide frequency range can be covered. The individual resonant chambers can be formed by lattice-like partitions in the area between the two plates or by a corresponding chamber-like shaping of the plate surface, accompanied by the formation of the resonant chambers. The individual resonant chambers are separated from one another either completely or at least in an acoustically effective manner. For example, with respect to FIG. 3 of DE 36 15 360 C2 it is described that the known cavity resonators are effective in ranges between 500 and 8,000 Hz. However, problems are encountered with sound damping in the lower frequency ranges, particularly around 200 Hz and lower.
 
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