scholarly journals ACTIVE NOISE CONTROL USING NEURAL SYSTEM

2010 ◽  
Vol 13 (3) ◽  
pp. 67-74
Author(s):  
Tuan Van Huynh ◽  
Nghĩa Hoai Duong

The principle of active noise control (ANC) is to produce a secondary acoustic noise which has the same magnitude as the unwanted primary noise but with opposite phase. The sum of these two signals reduces acoustic noise in the noise control area. In this paper we present a new ANC method using neural system. Moreover a new method for compensating the saturation of the power applifier is also introduced. The performance of the proposed method is compared to that of traditional methods. Simulation results are provided for illustration.

2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (19) ◽  
pp. 4065
Author(s):  
Kexun Chi ◽  
Ming Wu ◽  
Rong Han ◽  
Chen Gong ◽  
Jun Yang

The traditional mean squared error (MSE) criterion can be formulated as a quadratic function of a vector of control filter coefficients, and it is easy to obtain optimal control filter coefficients. Although the MSE criterion can lead to noise reductions in the control area, an unpredictable directional residual sound field is generated. In this paper, we propose a method for multi-channel active harmonic noise control with a local minimax error criterion based on the Nelder–Mead algorithm, which leads to reductions at all error positions and greater reductions at controllable positions. Directional noise reduction experiments of two areas are presented for two different error criteria at discrete locations in an anechoic chamber. Compared with a system employing the traditional MSE criterion, the results show that an active noise control system with the proposed criterion can achieve extra reductions at specified locations and overall noise reductions at the same time. The present research offers some important insights into directional control.


2018 ◽  
Vol 8 (11) ◽  
pp. 2291 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kenta Iwai ◽  
Satoru Hase ◽  
Yoshinobu Kajikawa

In this paper, we propose a multichannel active noise control (ANC) system with an optimal reference microphone selector based on the time difference of arrival (TDOA). A multichannel feedforward ANC system using upstream reference signals can reduce various noises such as broadband noise by arranging reference microphones close to noise sources. However, the noise reduction performance of an ANC system degrades when the noise environment changes, such as the arrival direction. This is because some reference microphones do not satisfy the causality constraint that the unwanted noise propagates to the control point faster than the anti-noise used to cancel the unwanted noise. To solve this problem, we propose a multichannel ANC system with an optimal reference microphone selector. This selector chooses the reference microphones that satisfy the causality constraint based on the TDOA. Some experimental results demonstrate that the proposed system can choose the optimal reference microphones and effectively reduce unwanted acoustic noise.


2009 ◽  
Vol 2009 ◽  
pp. 1-13 ◽  
Author(s):  
Govind Kannan ◽  
Issa M. S. Panahi ◽  
Richard W. Briggs

A large class of acoustic noise sources has an underlying periodic process that generates a periodic noise component, and thus their acoustic noise can in general be modeled as the sum of a periodic signal and a randomly fluctuating signal (usually a broadband background noise). Active control of periodic noise (i.e., for a mixture of sinusoids) is more effective than that of random noise. For mixtures of sinusoids in a background broadband random noise, conventional FXLMS-based single filter method does not reach the maximum achievable Noise Attenuation Level (NALmax⁡). In this paper, an alternative approach is taken and the idea of a parallel active noise control (ANC) architecture for cancelling mixtures of periodic and random signals is presented. The proposed ANC system separates the noise into periodic and random components and generates corresponding antinoises via separate noise cancelling filters, and tends to reach NALmax⁡ consistently. The derivation of NALmax⁡ is presented. Both the separation and noise cancellation are based on adaptive filtering. Experimental results verify the analytical development by showing superior performance of the proposed method, over the single-filter approach, for several cases of sinusoids in white noise.


2021 ◽  
Vol 312 ◽  
pp. 08007
Author(s):  
Marco Ciampolini ◽  
Lorenzo Bosi ◽  
Luca Romani ◽  
Andrea Toniutti ◽  
Matteo Giglioli ◽  
...  

Active Noise Control (ANC) has been considered a promising technology for the abatement of acoustic noise from the mid-20th century. Feedback and Feedforward ANC algorithms, based on the destructive interference principle applied to acoustic waves, have been developed for different applications, depending on the spectrum of the noise source. Feedback ANC algorithms make use of a single control microphone to measure an error signal which is then employed by an adaptive filter to estimate the noise source and generate an opposite-phase control signal. The Fx-LMS (Filtered-X Least Mean Square) algorithm is mostly adopted to update the filter. Feedback ANC systems have proven to be effective for the abatement of low-frequency quasi-steady noises; however, different challenges must be overcome to realize an effective and durable system for high-temperature application. This paper aims at experimentally assessing the feasibility of a Feedback Fx-LMS ANC system with off-line Secondary Path estimation to be used in mid-size diesel gensets for the reduction of the exhaust noise. Several solutions are proposed, including the mechanical design, the development of the Fx-LMS algorithm in the LabVIEW FPGA programming language, and the key features required to prevent parts from thermal damage and fouling. The developed prototype was implemented on a 50-kW diesel genset and tested in a semi-anechoic chamber. The noise abatement inside the exhaust pipe and at different measurement points around the machine was evaluated and discussed, showing good potential for improving the acoustic comfort of genset users.


Author(s):  
Rahmat Shoureshi ◽  
Yasuhiro Matsuyoshi

Abstract Acoustic noise has become an increasingly important problem, especially in industrial societies. The main reason being the increase in usage of machines in virtually all aspects of our lives, higher population densities, and concerns about the health consequences of exposure to acoustic noise. Passive noise control methods work well for relatively high frequency noise, but become progressively more expensive and less effective as one considers control of lower frequency noise. Development and implementation of an adaptive active noise controller is presented.


2008 ◽  
Vol 130 (5) ◽  
Author(s):  
Tom C. Waite ◽  
Qingze Zou ◽  
Atul Kelkar

In this article, an inversion-based feedforward control approach to achieve broadband active-noise control is investigated. Broadband active-noise control is needed in many areas, from heating, ventilation and air conditioning (HVAC) ducts to aircraft cabins. Achieving broadband active-noise control, however, is very challenging due to issues such as the complexity of acoustic dynamics (which has no natural roll-off at high frequency, and is often nonminimum phase), the wide frequency spectrum of the acoustic noise, and the critical requirement to overcome the delay of the control input relative to the noise signal. These issues have limited the success of existing feedforward control techniques to the low-frequency range of [0,1]kHz. The modeling issues in capturing the complex acoustic dynamics coupled with its nonminimum-phase characteristic also prevent the use of high-gain feedback methods, making the design of an effective controller to combat broadband noises challenging. In this article, we explore, through experiments, the potential of inversion-based feedforward control approach for noise control over the 1kHz low-frequency range limit. Then we account for the effect of modeling errors on the feedforward input by a recently developed inversion-based iterative control technique. Experimental results presented show that noise reduction of over 10–15dB can be achieved in a broad frequency range of 5kHz by using the inversion-based feedforward control technique.


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