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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 the first
flat, zero depth diffusor: the Flatffusor. The Flatffusor
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.
It's Digital!
To accomplish this goal, RPG® developed a new planar 2 dimensional
binary reflection amplitude grating consisting of a 31 x 33 element array
of 1,023 half inch square absorptive
or reflective areas. The reflective areas (black in upper illustration)
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 surface is in contrast to RPG®s
reflection phase gratings, which use phase variation rather than amplitude
variation to provide diffusion. The Flatffusor 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 Flatffusor 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 Flatffusor
panel extends the acoustical performance of traditional absorptive fabric
wrapped panels, allows wide area coverage without excessive deadening,
and offers an alternative to RPG®s line of traditional phase
grating diffusors. The Flatffusor panel is ideal for any facility
that needs reflection control from a decorative, upholstered, thin, and
cost effective wall or ceiling panel.
Problem
Budget constraints and available surface depth for acoustical applications
may prevent owners from using RPG®s traditional number theory
diffusors in their rooms, thus denying them the opportunity to realize
the significant benefits of sound diffusion technology.
Solution
To overcome these problems, RPG® developed the first economical flat
diffusor called the Flatffusor. This new diffusor differs from the
reflection phase grating (RPG) diffusors pioneered by RPG® 15 years
ago. Traditional RPG® diffusors vary the phase of the incoming sound
by reflection from 1 dimensional wells or 2 dimensional phase blocks whose
depths are based on number theory sequences. The Flatffusor offers
sound diffusion by varying the amplitude of the incident sound rather
than the phase, forming a variable impedance, binary amplitude grating.
An optimal 2 dimensional binary sequence is used to determine the spatial
positions of absorptive and reflective areas. The absorptive areas are
represented by a 0 and the reflective areas by a 1. The sizes of the binary
elements are less than half a wavelength of the upper frequency limit.
The Flatffusor is designed to provide uniform diffusion between
1 and 16 kHz. This mechanism is an effective new innovation in offering
sound diffusion from a flat surface.
The Flatffusor looks very much like a fabric wrapped absorptive
panel, yet it provides an attractive alternative to RPG®s furniture
grade or molded diffusors.
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 Flatffusor panel decreases specular scattering
and more closely approaches the uniform ideal diffusion line.
Diffusion
The performance of a scattering surface is characterized by the diffusion
coefficient, which is the standard deviation of the 1/3 octave angular
response, shown here at 12.5 kHz for normal incidence. The graph illustrates
how uniformly the Flatffusor scatters across the frequency spectrum,
averaged over all incident angles, compared to a reflective panel.
Installation
Installation of the Flatffusor panel is quick and easy. Simply use
construction adhesive or the supplied impaling clips to mount
the panel to walls or ceiling.
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Home:
Products:
Flatffusor
The First Digital Flat Sound Diffusor From The Acoustical Industrys
Leading Innovator
| Applications
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Project studio control rooms, studios, vocal and isolation rooms,
drum booths, gobos, individual practice rooms, band rehearsal
rooms, nightclubs, and performance stages |
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| Features
& Benefits |
Features
Omnidirectional diffusion from a thin, flat binary amplitude
grating
Optimal 2 dimensional binary sequence offers uniform diffusion
over a wide frequency range
Acoustical functionality is concealed with an upholstered decorative
fabric
Benefits
Provides high frequency diffusion in the form of a shallow depth
flat panel in situations where space is limited
Offers an alternative to higher priced 1 dimensional and 2 dimensional
broad bandwidth diffusors, which require greater surface depth
Can be used to cover large areas without creating an acoustically
"dead" space
Can be used to provide acoustic gain in conference rooms, classrooms,
and auditoriums to improve speech intelligibility and reduce
fatigue
Provides greater sound coverage for speech and music
Highly effective in creating a passive surround sound mixing
environment for all 5.1 formats |
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