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The Boundary Element Method (and Barrier Designs)

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Monopole. Dipole. Cardioid. Acoustics at Rensselaer. Start with the wave equation ... Pressure on surface can be represented with a monopole ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Boundary Element Method (and Barrier Designs)


1
The Boundary Element Method(and Barrier Designs)
  • Architectural Acoustics II
  • March 31, 2008

2
Barrier Designs
3
Barrier Designs
4
Barrier Designs
5
Barrier Designs
6
Barrier Designs
7
Barrier Designs
8
Barrier Designs
9
Barrier Designs
10
Barrier Designs
11
Barrier Designs
12
Barrier Designs
13
BEM Outline
  • Review
  • Complex Exponentials
  • Wave equation
  • Huygens Principle
  • Fresnels Obliquity Factor
  • Helmholtz-Kirchhoff Integral
  • Boundary Element Method
  • Relationship to Wave-Field Synthesis

14
References
  • Encyclopedia of Acoustics, M. Crocker (Ed.),
    Chapter 15, Acoustic Modeling Boundary Element
    Methods, 1997.
  • Acoustic Properties of Hanging Panel Arrays in
    Performance Spaces, T. Gulsrud, Masters Thesis,
    Univ. of Colorado, Boulder, 1999.
  • Boundary Elements X Vol. 4 Geomechanics, Wave
    Propagation, and Vibrations, C. Brebbia (Ed.),
    1988.
  • Boundary Element Fundamentals, G. Gipson, 1987.
  • Assessing the accuracy of auralizations computed
    using a hybrid geometrical-acoustics and
    wave-acoustics method, J. Summers, K.
    Takahashi, Y. Shimizu, and T. Yamakawa J.
    Acoust. Soc. Am. 115, 2514 (2004).

15
Complex Exponentials
In general
For the upcoming derivation
16
Wave Equation
  • Hyperbolic partial differential equation
  • Partial derivatives with respect to time (t) and
    space ( )
  • Can be derived using equations for the
    conservation of mass and momentum, and an
    equation of state

17
Huygens Principle
(From 1690) Consider a source from which (light)
waves radiate, and an isolated wavefront created
by the source. Each element on such a wavefront
can be considered as a secondary source of
spherical waves, and the position of the original
wavefront at a later time is the envelope of the
secondary waves.
Christiaan Huygens (1629 1695)
18
Huygens Principle
Point source S emitting spherical waves.
19
Huygens Principle
Secondary sources on an isolated wavefront.
20
Huygens Principle
Spherical wavelets from secondary sources.
21
Huygens Principle
This is the problem with the original Huygens
Principle.
Envelope of wavelets outward
inward
22
Huygens Principle
Envelope of wavelets, outward only.
23
Fresnel
Huygens-Fresnel Principle (1818) Fresnel added
the concept of wave interference to Huygens
principle and showed that it could be used to
explain diffraction. He also added the idea of a
direction-dependent obliquity factor secondary
sources do not radiate spherically.
Augustin Fresnel (1788 1827)
24
Kirchhoff
Kirchhoff showed that the Huygens-Fresnel
Principle is a non-rigorous form of an integral
equation that expresses the solution to the wave
equation at an arbitrary point within the field
created by a source. He also explicitly derived
the obliquity factor for the secondary sources.
Gustav Kirchhoff (1824 - 1887)
25
Helmholtz
Namesake of the Helmholtz equation and a huge
contributor to the science of acoustics.
Hermann von Helmholtz (1821 - 1894)
26
Fresnels Non-Spherical Secondary Sources
?
?
S
27
Fresnels Non-Spherical Secondary Sources
S
28
Fresnels Secondary Sources

-
Monopole
Dipole
Cardioid
-

29
Helmholtz Equation
  • Start with the wave equation
  • Assume p is time harmonic, i.e.
  • Then the wave equation becomes the Helmholtz
    Equation
  • k ?/c is the wave number

30
Greens Functions
  • To represent free-field radiation, we need the
    function
  • G is called a Greens Function (after George
    Green (1793-1841))
  • A Greens Function is a fundamental solution to a
    differential equation, i.e.
    where L is a linear differential
    operator
  • In this case (the Helmholtz equation),

r dist. between Q and P
31
Two Applications
V volume
S surrounding surface
n surface normal
Q receiver
r distance from Q to a point on S
32
Helmholtz-Kirchhoff Integral
  • Start with these equations
  • Multiply (1) by G and (2) by p
  • Subtract (3) from (4)

(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
33
Helmholtz-Kirchhoff Integral
  • From the previous slide
  • Integrate over the volume V
  • Apply Greens Second Identity
  • The result is the Helmholtz-Kirchhoff Integral

34
Helmholtz-Kirchhoff Integral
  • From the previous slide
  • Recall
  • So

35
Helmholtz-Kirchhoff Integral
p(Q) sound pressure at receiver point Q
? 2?f frequency of sound
(f frequency in Hz)
pS sound pressure on the surface S
n surface normal
k ?/c wave number
c speed of sound
r distance from point on S to Q
36
Helmholtz-Kirchhoff Integral
  • The Helmholtz-Kirchhoff integral describes the
    (frequency domain) acoustic pressure at a point Q
    in terms of the pressure and its normal
    derivative on the surrounding surface(s).

The normal derivative of the pressure is
proportional to the particle velocity.
37
Helmholtz-Kirchhoff Integral ?Boundary Element
Method
  • HK Integral gives us the (acoustic) pressure at a
    point Q in space if we know the pressure p and
    normal velocity dp/dn everywhere on a surrounding
    closed surface
  • For the BEM, we
  • Discretize the boundary surface into small pieces
    over which p and dp/dn are constant
  • Calculate p and dp/dn for each patch
  • Use the patch values to calculate p(Q)

38
BEM Details
  • Discretization changes the integral to a
    summation over patches
  • Patches can be rectangular, triangular, etc.
  • Each patch can be defined by multiple nodes (e.g.
    for a triangle at the three corners and the
    center) or just one at the center
  • Multiple nodes per patch interpolate p and dp/dn
    between them
  • One node per patch p and dp/dn are assumed to be
    constant over the patch
  • Patches/node spacing must be smaller than a
    wavelength so p and dp/dn dont vary much over
    the patch
  • Typically at least 6 per wavelength, so
    high-frequency calculations are prohibitively
    expensive computation-wise
  • There are several methods to find p and dp/dn

39
Simplest Solution The Kirchhoff Approximation
  • At each patch, let p RRefl PInc
  • RRefl surface reflection coeff.
  • PInc incident pressure
  • Surface velocity found in a similar way
  • Surface conditions are due to source only. No
    patch-to-patch interaction!
  • Useful only for the exterior problem

40
Proper BEM
  • To make this easier, well make two assumptions
  • The surface is rigid, so dp/dn 0
  • We have one node per patch (at the center)
  • A surface with N patches and N nodes
  • So, we have

Image from Sounds Good to Me!, Funkhouser, Jot,
and Tsingos, Siggraph 2002 Course Notes
41
BEM
  • Create N new receivers and place one at each node
    on the surface
  • So for receiver j we have
  • And a set of N linear equations in matrix form

Direct sound at receiver j
Influence of other patches on j
where
42
BEM
  • But since each receiver is on the surface
  • So

where I is the identity matrix
This is why BEM is only useful at low frequencies
and/or for small spaces. F is an n x n matrix,
and matrix inversion is O(n2.4)!
43
BEM
  • Now we have the pressure at each node/patch,
    specifically the N-element vector
  • Use the values in psurf to find p(Q) using our
    original equation

44
Results
A new analysis method of sound fields by boundary
integral equation and its applications, Tadahira
and Hamada.
45
Results
A new analysis method of sound fields by boundary
integral equation and its applications, Tadahira
and Hamada.
46
Results
Prediction and evaluation of the scattering from
quadratic residue diffusers, Cox and Lam, JASA
1994.
47
Hybrid BEM/GA Modeling
CATT-Acoustic
100 Hz
Sysnoise BEM
100 Hz
IFFT
J. Summers, K. Takahashi, Y. Shimizu, and T.
Yamakawa, Assessing the accuracy of
auralizations computed using a hybrid
geometrical-acoustics and wave-acoustics method,
147th ASA Meeting, New York, NY, May 2004.
48
Test Case Assembly Hall at Yamaha
Summers et al. 2004
49
Test Case Assembly Hall at Yamaha
  • Why this space?
  • Reasonable size allows for tractable BEM
  • Easy access for measurements and surface
    impedance measurement
  • Existing computer model
  • Model details
  • 11180 linear triangular elements
  • ?l 0.64 m
  • f 10 100 Hz
  • elements / ? 5 for all frequencies

Summers et al. 2004
50
Results Time Domain
GABEM
GA
Measured
63 Hz octave band
Summers et al. 2004
51
Results Frequency Domain
Summers et al. 2004
52
Results Energy-Time
T20 solid EDT dashed ts dotted
Summers et al. 2004
53
Overall Results
  • Hybrid GA / WA techniques can model full-scale
    auditoria
  • Uncertainties in input parameters limit accuracy
    of low-frequency computations
  • Use of WA-based models at low frequencies affects
    audible variations
  • Substantially larger data set required to assess
    classification schemes (6 subjects, 10 tests per
    subject, convolution with organ music)

Summers et al. 2004
54
Barrier Analysis with BEM
55
Barrier Analysis with BEM
56
Helmholtz-Kirchhoff Integral and Wave-Field
Synthesis
  • Pressure on surface can be represented with a
    monopole
  • Velocity on the surface can be represented with a
    dipole
  • Reconstruct the surface (boundary) conditions
    with speakers to synthesize the interior sound
    field

57
Helmholtz-Kirchhoff Integral and Wave-Field
Synthesis
http//recherche.ircam.fr/equipes/salles/WFS_WEBSI
TE/Index_wfs_site.htm
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