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Facilities
The
Acoustics Laboratory
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The Cooper
Union Audio Lab (CUAL) at The Cooper Union's prestigious Albert
Nerken School of Engineering ranks as one of the finest laboratories
devoted to education and research in the field of recorded
and reinforced sound. The facility includes a large walk-in,
full-surround anechoic chamber, characterized by a cut-off
frequency of approximately 140 Hz, and an echo chamber with
a reverberation time T60 > 4.5 sec. Instrumentation includes
a full complement of Bruel and Kjaer sound and vibration instrumentation,
Fast Fourier Transform (FFT) analyzers, signal generators,
four Mackie 824 Studio Monitor loudspeakers, numerous test
loudspeakers, test microphones, portable DAT, portable binaural
broadcast quality microphone systems, and a fully operational
DJ booth including a Urei 1620 mixer and three shock mounted
Technics SL1200-M3D turntables and two Pioneer CDJ700 CD players.
Computer software includes Pro Tools, Sound Forge, and MATLAB.
In addition, the laboratory benefits from a high-speed internet
connection and a substantial acoustics library which includes
a complete set of the Journal of the Acoustical Society of
America. A well-equipped tool/storage room provides a site
for maintaining and repairing instruments. Also, the Department
of Mechanical Engineering operates a complete state-of-the-art
machine shop, and offers available resources in electronic
circuit design and fabrication, and laser velocimeters to
measure sound correlates.
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Ongoing research projects include the following:
- Dry
recordings of speech, music, and sound effects made in
the anechoic chamber using a remote located Pro Tools
system
- Design,
development and testing of new loudspeaker designs
- Visualization
and research of the acoustical properties of cymbals and
development of new technologies to record their motion
and radiated sound
- Development
of high fidelity wearable sound systems
- Measurements
of reverberation times of the various interior spaces
at The Cooper Union and development and installation of
engineering solutions to improve the acoustics
- Electronic
design of advanced acoustical devices for large scale
sound reproduction
Support for art and architectural installations and projects
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EID
160 Student Projects Cooper Union Audio Lab - Spring
2002
- Helmholtz
resonator
A Helmholtz resonator was constructed from PVC piping.
The design permitted changes to the resonators volume,
neck length, and neck area. The device was excited by
a stream of air directed across the neck, then later by
a loudspeaker. The design was iterated to optimize performance
taking into account effects of viscous boundary layer
damping in the neck, radiation resistance of the open
end, and frequency of oscillation. Tests were conducted
to compare measured results with theoretical predictions,
including length corrections required by the neck.
- Design,
fabrication, and testing of an electronic music mixer
Circuit diagrams were obtained for various DJ (Disc jockey)
mixers and tone control circuits. Statistical frequency
analysis and spectrograms were conducted on relevant musical
program material to determine the center frequency and
bandwidths of certain instruments. These results drove
the design of specialized controllable parametric filters
to be used in a new DJ mixer design. The component circuit
was fabricated and tested in laboratory and live music
conditions.
- Design,
fabrication, and testing of a new tri-amplified loudspeaker
design
A group of students developed a new design for a single
unit loudspeaker system which is intended to rest on the
floor or be hung overhead, providing uniform sound coverage
over a hemispherical zone around the unit from 50-15,000
Hz. After a literature and product search, 13 component
loudspeakers were acquired: 1 woofer, 4 midrange, and
8 tweeters. The mounting for the speakers was designed,
and the entire system was fabricated and tested. Testing
included determination of relative gains, crossover frequency
points and roll-offs.
- Acoustical
characteristics of Hi-Hat cymbals
A closed Hi-Hat cymbal system was constructed and attached
to a shaker so vibrational modes of the cymbals could
be excited. The cymbals were tested in open, just contacting,
and tightly contacting configurations. For each, a swept
sine wave excitation permitted determination of mode frequencies
and approximate quality factors. By sprinkling blue sand
on the cymbal surface while vibrating, the classic Chlandi
figures could be clearly observed revealing the mode shapes
including the very complex nodal lines at the higher frequencies.
This information was utilized to permit accelerometer
and laser velocity measurements of correlates of radiated
sound.
- Improvement
of the acoustical characteristics of Room 202
Room 202 of the Engineering building at The Cooper Union
was inspected and tested for speech intelligibility, background
noise, and reverberation time. It was found that the room
suffers from a reverberation time in excess of 3 seconds,
with the ideal for a lecture room being less than 1 second.
Further, excess background noise was found due to air
circulation vents in the window sills. Tests of speech
produced at the front of the room and heard at the back
confirmed that the resulting acoustic properties of the
rooms interior were problematic. Theoretical calculations
predicted that if 50% of the ceiling was covered with
absorbing foam panels, the reverberation time would be
adequately reduced. Small wooden barriers with one side
covered in foam were designed to block mid and high frequency
noise from the air vents. The foam and barriers were installed
and the room was retested. The reverberation time was
reduced to .9 seconds and the background noise from the
air vents was reduced by 7 dB the acoustics of
the room was greatly improved.
- Performance
metrics of non-linear electronic devices
Utilizing a high performance dual-channel dynamic signal
analyzer, two electronic music mixers were evaluated to
determine what non-linear properties were responsible
for their relative subjective properties. Typically, no
explicitly non-linear metrics are professional electronic
audio equipment. Interviews with professional musicians
suggested that of the two mixers, one of the circuit designs
permitted a greater non-linear summation of different
music signals resulting in a superior sound. This led
to tests of level dependent frequency response, coherence,
and confidence. After the objective evaluation was complete,
side-by-side calibrated A/B subjective testing of the
two units was conducted. A plan is in place to have a
public demonstration in the future for industry professionals.
- Wearable
full-range sound system
Conventional stereo headphones can be used to recreate
the ear reception free-field listening experience down
to very low frequencies, but they do not reproduce the
sensation of sound produced by low frequency, large wavelength
sound applying pressure over the body. Various devices
attempt to do this but they all apply the forces locally,
unlike actual sound pressure fields at large wavelengths
which apply pressures somewhat uniformly over the bodys
exterior. A device was developed and tested to achieve
this using a circumferentially actuated belt. It successfully
produced inward radially-directed pulsating forces spread
over a large body area. The effect was to better recreate
the real experience of listening to sound in free-field
using a wearable system.
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