Field measurements of airborne sound insulation; Differences in results for methods prescribed in current standards at different degrees of furnishing and a possible new approach
Publicerad
Författare
Typ
Examensarbete för masterexamen
Master's Thesis
Master's Thesis
Modellbyggare
Tidskriftstitel
ISSN
Volymtitel
Utgivare
Sammanfattning
There is a widespread belief among acousticians that the airborne sound insulation
measured between empty rooms systematically results in lower values than when
furnished. No studies investigating the phenomenon were found and since inspection
measurements are mostly performed in empty rooms, the difference, if it exists,
would need to be quantified and addressed. Since regulations in Sweden, in many
cases, require measurements down to lower frequencies than in other countries, and
the theoretical framework on which existing methods are based is generally less
valid at lower frequencies, there is reason to believe that the problem could be more
common in Sweden.
In addition, a variety of measurement methods are described in current standards,
of which only a few are regularly used. No studies have been found where the
methods are systematically tested and compared. Methods based on measurements
and further processing of impulse responses, using deterministic signals, are very
useful in certain situations but are, to the author’s knowledge, almost never used.
This is probably mainly because methods based on manual scanning paths with a
hand-held analyzer are more time-efficient in field measurements.
The main objective of this study is to identify whether furnishing leads to systematic
deviations in measured sound insulation. This is achieved by testing and comparing
several of the methods described in the current standards. A possible explanation
for the error could be that the sound pressure levels are measured with the loudspeaker
positioned in the source room, while the reverberation times are measured
with the loudspeaker in the receiving room. There is reason to believe that the
differences in the sound fields for these two cases reduce the compatibility between
these measurements, especially at low frequencies.
Since methods based on impulse responses measured with swept-sine signals provide
superior signal-to-noise ratios that far exceed the other methods, the reverberation
time can possibly be measured without moving the loudspeaker from the source
to the receiving room. If that would be possible, both the sound level differences
between the rooms and the reverberation time, i.e. all measurements required to
evaluate the sound insulation, could be measured from a single sine sweep. If a
foldable measurement stand was developed, which quickly could spread out a number
of microphone positions in a space, field measurement times could be drastically
reduced. However, the method where the reverberation time is measured with the
loudspeaker in the source room was shown to perform significantly worse than default
methods. Nevertheless, the method can potentially be used for simpler survey
measurements, without further development. Systematic differences, between furnished
unfurnished rooms, were demonstrated for the weighted standardized
level differences. However, contrary to what was expected, the differences do not
arise as a result of deviations for the lower 1/3-octave bands. Rather, the differences arise
as a result of deviations for the 1/3-octave bands 200 Hz, 250 Hz and
for some higher frequency bands. Hence, the results do not support the suspicion
that measurements according to the Swedish regulations, which includes frequency
bands below 100 Hz, result in systematic deviations greater than what would be the
case in other countries.
Beskrivning
Ämne/nyckelord
sound insulation, field measurement, reverberation time, swept-sine, integrated impulse response, interrupted noise
