Singular vector filtering method for mitigation of disturbance enhancement in multichannel active noise control systems

2021 ◽  
Vol 69 (5) ◽  
pp. 451-459
Author(s):  
Yongjie Zhuang ◽  
Xuchen Wang ◽  
Yangfan Liu

In the design of multichannel active noise control filters, the disturbance enhancement phenomenon will sometimes occur, i.e., the resulting sound is enhanced instead of being reduced in some frequency bands, if the control filter is designed to minimize the power of error signals in other frequency bands or across all frequencies. In previous work, a truncated singular value decomposition method was applied to the system autocorrelation matrix to mitigate the disturbance enhancement. Some small singular values and the associated singular vectors are removed, if they are responsible for unwanted disturbance enhancement in some frequency bands. However, some of these removed singular vectors may still contribute to the noise control performance in other frequency bands; thus, a direct truncation will degrade the noise control performance. In the present work, through an additional filtering process, the set of singular vectors that causes the disturbance enhancement is replaced by a set of new singular vectors whose frequency responses are attenuated in the frequency band where disturbance enhancement occurs, while the frequency responses in other frequency bands are unchanged. Compared with truncation approach, the proposed method can maintain the performance in the noise reduction bands, while mitigating the influence in disturbance enhancement bands.

1991 ◽  
Vol 113 (4) ◽  
pp. 523-531 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. D. Stell ◽  
R. J. Bernhard

This paper presents an analysis of the effectiveness of active noise control methods for control of high order modes in rigid-walled, semi-infinite waveguides. The waveguides examined in this investigation are terminated at one end with a rigid end. The case studies performed reconfirmed that n control actuators can control n propagating modes (including the plane wave) in a waveguide if the actuators are properly placed. The results also confirmed that the control actuators should be located at the node surfaces of the most significant evanescent modes to avoid various problems that evanescent modes cause active control systems. A significant new finding is the effect of the rigid waveguide termination on the active controller. The reflected energy from the termination causes standing waves in the region between the rigid termination and the secondary sources. At certain frequencies which correspond to resonant conditions, the standing wave amplitudes become large and the control actuator strength must be high. At these frequencies the effects of the evanescent modes become significant even when the mode is not close to its cut-on frequency. Similar resonant effects can be expected to affect active noise control performance for any case where there are significant reflections in the waveguide upstream of the control actuators.


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