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Well
balanced acoustical designs contain an appropriate combination of absorption,
reflection, and diffusion. In many applications, however, limited budget
or surface treatment thickness preclude the use of diffusion. Absorptive,
fabric wrapped panels are specified for lack of an alternative. Unfortunately,
wide area application may lead to an acoustically "dead" environment without
"air" or ambiance.
To solve this problem, RPG® developed and
patented the Binary Amplitude Diffsorbor:
the first flat, zero depth diffusing absorber. A BAD Panel simultaneously
provides uniform sound diffusion at high and mid band frequencies and
crosses over to pure absorption below the diffusive cutoff. The energy
that is not diffused is absorbed. For a competitive evaluation of commercial products that claim to provide
equivalent performance to the Bad Panel, we invite you to examine our White Paper.
It's Digital!
To accomplish diffsorption, RPG® developed a new planar 2 dimensional
binary reflection amplitude grating consisting of a 31 x 33 element array
of 1,023 0.5 sq. in. absorptive or reflective areas. The
reflective areas (black in illustration to left) map to the "1" bit and
the absorptive areas (white) map to 0, or vice versa. The distribution
of these resorptive binary elements is based on a 2 dimensional optimal
binary sequence with a flat power spectrum. The resulting variable impedance
surface forms a binary reflection amplitude grating suggested by James
Angus. This is in contrast to RPG®'s reflection phase gratings which
use phase variation, rather than amplitude variation, to provide diffusion.
The Binary Amplitude Diffsorbor (BAD) Panel provides diffusion
about an octave above the frequency whose wavelength is twice the size
of the binary element. This explains the limitation of traditional variable
impedance arrays. For example, 1' x 1' panels provide diffusion up to
about 1 kHz. Remaining high frequency reflections would still corrupt
speech and music quality.
The
BAD Panel consists of a binary mask attached to the face of a semi
rigid fiberglass panel. The panel is upholstered in a decorative fabric
to completely conceal the acoustical functionality. The BAD Panel
extends the acoustical performance of traditional absorptive fabric wrapped
panels and allows wide area coverage without excessive deadening. Acousticians
now have a diffsorptive alternative to traditional purely absorptive fabric
wrapped panels at competitive prices. The BAD Panel is ideal for
any facility that needs reflection control from a decorative, upholstered,
thin, and cost effective wall or ceiling panel.
Problem
Traditional foam and fabric wrapped absorptive panels offer a cost effective, low profile
approach to providing reflection and reverberation control.
However, these panels offer little sound diffusion and large area application
may lead to an acoustically "dead" space. Variable impedance arrays offer
some help, but cannot provide diffusion at mid and high frequencies.
Solution
RPG® developed an innovative variable impedance panel by fabric wrapping
an optimal binary template consisting of reflective areas and holes
over a semi rigid fiberglass panel. The resulting Binary Amplitude Diffsorbor
Panel provides mid and high frequency diffusion and low frequency absorption.
Absorption
The graph illustrates how the BAD Panel offers an increase in bass
absorption over a standard upholstered 1" panel below 1000 Hz, and a decreased
absorption above this frequency for a 5/8" diameter and the standard 1/2"
diameter hole. The binary template allows the sound above 1000 Hz, which
was conventionally lost to absorption, to be uniformly diffused providing
reflection control without destroying the room's ambiance.
Angular scattering response
For
normally incident sound, the graph illustrates the angular response at 12.5
kHz. The flat reflector scatters sound primarily into the 90° specular
direction. The wall mounted absorptive panel has similar response, only
attenuated. The BAD Panel decreases specular scattering and more closely
approaches the uniform ideal diffusion line.
Installation
For fixed wall mounting,
simply secure the ImpaleIt™ clip to a surface, with screws
or with a hook and loop fastener. Make a mark at the desired height
of the panel and 1” above that for alignment. Line up the
panel with the higher mark and gently pierce the back of the panel
with the triangular prongs. Then press firmly into the ImpaleIt™
clip and press downward until the panel settles against the wall at the desired height.
For removable wall mounting, simply attach a “Z” channel to the surface and hang the ImpaleIt™
clip on the channel. Make a mark at the desired height and 1”
above that for alignment. Align the panel at the mark 1” above
the desired height and gently pierce the back of the panel with
the triangular prongs. Then firmly press the panel into the ImpaleIt™
clip, allowing it to pierce the rear of the panel and push downward
until the panel settles against the wall at the desired height.
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Home:
Products:
BAD Panel
The
First Digital, Flat Sound Diffuser From The Acoustical Industrys
Leading Innovator

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Fabric Selections |


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| Features
& Benefits |
Features
Simultaneous diffusive and absorptive sound control in a thin,
decorative, cost effective panel
Optimal binary reflection amplitude grating containing resorptive
elements
Acoustical functionality concealed with decorative upholstered
fabrics or commercial stretch fabric systems
Benefits
When space is limited, provides sound diffusion in a shallow
depth flat panel
Simultaneously offers diffusion and absorption for an integrated
design
Reflections can be diffsorptively attenuated without creating
a "dead" space
Extends the performance of absorptive fabric wrapped panels
and stretch fabric systems at competitive prices
Can be used for wide area coverage without excessive absorption
Can be used to provide acoustic gain in conference rooms, classrooms,
and auditoriums to improve speech intelligibility and reduce
fatigue
Diffsorptive surfaces provide greater sound coverage for speech
and music
Suitable as stretch fabric core material |
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