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Thermoviscous boundary layer impedance vs Narrow region acoustics
Posted 2024年2月10日 GMT+1 21:35Structural & Acoustics, Acoustics & VibrationsVersion 5.3a3 Replies
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Hi all,
Now I'm evaluating a loudspeaker with a bass-reflected tube since I noticed that without adding the losses, which are induced by the boundary layer, the result seemed to be too nice ( the boosted level is too exaggerated). Hence, I tried to add the losses to the tube, but here comes the problem:
the two ways to add the losses, which are thermoviscous boundary layer impedance and narrow region acoustics, gave different results, the thermoviscous boundary layer impedance showed a nice boosted SPL while the narrow region acoustics showed no boosting.
According to the tutorial from the COMSOL, I've checked that the boundary layer is thinner than the geometry dimensions, which means that the thermoviscous boundary is not overlapping together, thus the thermovsicous boundary layer impedance is usable, hence the thermoviscous boundary layer impedance and the narrow region acoustics should both be feasible.
Could someone explain the reason? I appreciate any help you can provide.