Enhancement of the sound absorption of closed-cell mineral foams by perforations: Manufacturing process and model-supported adaptation
Bart Van Damme, Th\'eo Cavalieri, Cong-Truc Nguyen, Camille Perrot

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates how perforating mineral foams and optimizing their properties can significantly improve low-frequency sound absorption in thin layers, supported by simulations and experimental validation.
Contribution
It introduces a novel method of perforating mineral foams and models their acoustic behavior, enabling high absorption at sub-wavelength thicknesses.
Findings
Perforated mineral foams achieve high low-frequency absorption
Finite element simulations match experimental results
Optimized foam properties enhance sub-wavelength absorption
Abstract
Thin low-frequency acoustic absorbers that are economical to produce in large quantities are scarce, and their efficiency is often limited to a narrow frequency range. In this paper, we present opportunities to use highly porous mineral foams, in particular optimally designed gypsum foams, to achieve high absorption levels for layers of less than 1/10 of a wavelength thick. To reach this goal, we perforate a fraction of the initially closed pores using thin needles. Finite element simulations of the fluid flow in a representative volume element show how the combination of foam properties (cell size and wall thickness) and perforation pattern (hole diameter and perforation distance) can be chosen such that sub-wavelength absorption is obtained. In particular two transport parameters used in the approximate but robust Johnson-Champoux-Allard model for porous media have to be optimized:…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAcoustic Wave Phenomena Research · Cellular and Composite Structures · Asphalt Pavement Performance Evaluation
