arrow_back_ios

Main Menu

See All Software See All Instruments See All Transducers See All Vibration Testing Equipment See All Electroacoustics See All Acoustic End-of-Line Test Systems See All Academy See All Resource Center See All Applications See All Industries See All Services See All Support See All Our Business See All Our History See All Global Presence
arrow_back_ios

Main Menu

See All Analysis & Simulation Software See All DAQ Software See All Drivers & API See All Utility See All Vibration Control See All High Precision and Calibration Systems See All DAQ Systems See All S&V Hand-held Devices See All Industrial Electronics See All Power Analyzer See All S&V Signal Conditioner See All Acoustic Transducers See All Current and Voltage Sensors See All Displacement Sensors See All Force Sensors See All Load Cells See All Multi Component Sensors See All Pressure Sensors See All Strain Sensors See All Strain Gauges See All Temperature Sensors See All Tilt Sensors See All Torque Sensors See All Vibration See All Accessories for Vibration Testing Equipment See All Vibration Controllers See All Measurement Exciters See All Modal Exciters See All Power Amplifiers See All LDS Shaker Systems See All Test Solutions See All Actuators See All Combustion Engines See All Durability See All eDrive See All Production Testing Sensors See All Transmission & Gearboxes See All Turbo Charger See All Training Courses See All Acoustics See All Asset & Process Monitoring See All Custom Sensors See All Durability & Fatigue See All Electric Power Testing See All NVH See All Reliability See All Vibration See All Weighing See All Automotive & Ground Transportation See All Calibration See All Installation, Maintenance & Repair See All Support Brüel & Kjær See All Release Notes See All Compliance
arrow_back_ios

Main Menu

See All nCode - Durability and Fatigue Analysis See All ReliaSoft - Reliability Analysis and Management See All API See All Experimental Testing See All Electroacoustics See All Noise Source Identification See All Environmental Noise See All Sound Power and Sound Pressure See All Noise Certification See All Industrial Process Control See All Structural Health Monitoring See All Electrical Devices Testing See All Electrical Systems Testing See All Grid Testing See All High-Voltage Testing See All Vibration Testing with Electrodynamic Shakers See All Structural Dynamics See All Machine Analysis and Diagnostics See All Dynamic Weighing See All Vehicle Electrification See All Calibration Services for Transducers See All Calibration Services for Handheld Instruments See All Calibration Services for Instruments & DAQ See All On-Site Calibration See All Resources See All Software License Management

Hand-held Microphone Arrays In NVH

Microphone arrays help engineers develop sound quality on vehicles, giving fast and effective noise source identification. Now, advanced new techniques improve the insights possible.

Measurement Microphones


LEARN MORE
MEASUREMENT MICROPHONES

 

One of the challenges for the automotive engineer is understanding the cause of a noise problem. Simple measurements, such as those done using a single microphone, can reveal the frequencies at which the sound pressure level is dominant, but cannot provide insights into the location of the sources.

Positioning the microphone at different locations close to the presumed source can help, but this approach can lead to faulty conclusions because it depends heavily on the locations selected, and on the engineer’s interpretation of the data.

Microphone array techniques can help engineers to make the right decisions more quickly by visualizing the sound field on the surfaces of interest. Visually representing the sound field makes it much easier to identify noise issues caused by phenomena such as acoustic leakage from openings or from structural resonances.

Rather than displaying only sound pressure levels, microphone array techniques provide more acoustic quantities such as sound intensity, particle velocity, and sound quality metrics – all of which can be necessary to understand the noise-generating mechanisms.

 

Microphone array techniques

This whitepaper describes array techniques that can provide even more sophisticated insights.

Whitepaper

READ FULL WHITEPAPER
HAND-HELD ARRAYS
IN AUTOMOTIVE NVH

 

One such is intensity component analysis, which can extract the sound intensity coming from in front of the array while suppressing sound from behind – making an effective tool for vehicle cabins, which have very diffuse fields. Another method presented is panel contribution, which separates the contribution of individual panels to, for instance, the driver’s ear position inside a car.

The in situ absorption method can be used to calculate and visualize the absorption coefficients of the ceiling of a vehicle, rather than having to perform the measurement on a material sample in an impedance tube.

All these methods use the same small, hand-held array, which is easy to move around inside a cabin environment and fits easily in narrow spaces. And because the array has two layers of microphones it is effective in conditions with sources or reflections that come from behind the array, which is typically the case inside cabins.