US2169370A - Sound-absorbing article - Google Patents

Sound-absorbing article Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2169370A
US2169370A US116709A US11670936A US2169370A US 2169370 A US2169370 A US 2169370A US 116709 A US116709 A US 116709A US 11670936 A US11670936 A US 11670936A US 2169370 A US2169370 A US 2169370A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
sound
sheet
absorbing
vibratile
article
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US116709A
Inventor
John S Parkinson
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Johns Manville Corp
Johns Manville
Original Assignee
Johns Manville
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Johns Manville filed Critical Johns Manville
Priority to US116709A priority Critical patent/US2169370A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2169370A publication Critical patent/US2169370A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E04BUILDING
    • E04BGENERAL BUILDING CONSTRUCTIONS; WALLS, e.g. PARTITIONS; ROOFS; FLOORS; CEILINGS; INSULATION OR OTHER PROTECTION OF BUILDINGS
    • E04B1/00Constructions in general; Structures which are not restricted either to walls, e.g. partitions, or floors or ceilings or roofs
    • E04B1/62Insulation or other protection; Elements or use of specified material therefor
    • E04B1/74Heat, sound or noise insulation, absorption, or reflection; Other building methods affording favourable thermal or acoustical conditions, e.g. accumulating of heat within walls
    • E04B1/82Heat, sound or noise insulation, absorption, or reflection; Other building methods affording favourable thermal or acoustical conditions, e.g. accumulating of heat within walls specifically with respect to sound only
    • E04B1/84Sound-absorbing elements
    • E04B1/86Sound-absorbing elements slab-shaped
    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E04BUILDING
    • E04BGENERAL BUILDING CONSTRUCTIONS; WALLS, e.g. PARTITIONS; ROOFS; FLOORS; CEILINGS; INSULATION OR OTHER PROTECTION OF BUILDINGS
    • E04B1/00Constructions in general; Structures which are not restricted either to walls, e.g. partitions, or floors or ceilings or roofs
    • E04B1/62Insulation or other protection; Elements or use of specified material therefor
    • E04B1/74Heat, sound or noise insulation, absorption, or reflection; Other building methods affording favourable thermal or acoustical conditions, e.g. accumulating of heat within walls
    • E04B1/82Heat, sound or noise insulation, absorption, or reflection; Other building methods affording favourable thermal or acoustical conditions, e.g. accumulating of heat within walls specifically with respect to sound only
    • E04B1/84Sound-absorbing elements
    • E04B2001/8423Tray or frame type panels or blocks, with or without acoustical filling

Definitions

  • This invention relates to a sound absorbing article. More particularly, this invention relates to a sound-absorbing article which can be employed as an acoustical treatment for a room,
  • a number of sound-absorbing articles heretofore used have included perforated or porous facing elements permitting incident sound to pass therethrough to a rearwardly disposed soundabsorbing member. Cleaning the face of such articles by Washing may involve wetting the sound absorbing material, and breathing of air through the perforations may cause uneven deposition of dirt, unless a special antibreathing 5 sound absorbent is used.
  • the majority of sound-absorbing articles show a preferential absorption or peak of effectiveness when the sound to be absorbed is of a given frequency, with a decrease in efficiency, when the frequency of the sound to be absorbed is lower or higher than the optimum for the material used.
  • the result is frequently distortional of the original quality of the sound.
  • the invention comprises the novel features of the sound-absorbing article herein described, the term article including construction or assembly.
  • the inven- 40. tion comprises an acoustical article in which a readily vibratile, air-impermeable sheet is disposed in contact, over the major portion of its area, preferably, substantially continuously, with a vibration-damping material, the said sheet being not adhered over the said major portion of the damping material.
  • One embodiment comprises two air-impermeable readily vibratile sheets and a layer of vibration-damping and, suitably, sound-absorbing material disposed 1 therebehind or therebetween, the sheets again being non-adhered and not otherwise secured as before.
  • the invention comprises, also, a soundabsorbing article including a member, as, for example, a felt, adapted to absorb preferentially 55; sound of a given frequenc a vibratile facing sheet disposed in front of the said member, contacting therewith at close intervals, but not adhered thereto over the major portion of its area, and means confining air behind the said sheet, the said sheet in the article described having a 5 natural vibration frequency different from the frequency of the sound preferentially absorbed by the said member.
  • a soundabsorbing article including a member, as, for example, a felt, adapted to absorb preferentially 55; sound of a given frequenc a vibratile facing sheet disposed in front of the said member, contacting therewith at close intervals, but not adhered thereto over the major portion of its area, and means confining air behind the said sheet, the said sheet in the article described having a 5 natural vibration frequency different from the frequency of the sound preferentially absorbed by the said member.
  • Fig. 1 is a cross sectional view of my improved article.
  • Fig. 2 is a cross sectional view of a modification of the invention. 15
  • vibration-damping member II that is suitably light in weight, readily yieldable, and adapted to absorb sound.
  • This member may include a porous felt of hair, mineral wool, or like material.
  • vibratile sheet facing element (membrane) H for which I have used to advantage a metal foil, such as three-ounce copper, paper, or other substantially air-impermeable sheet material, as, for instance, lightweight tar paper or asphaltimpregnated roofing felt.
  • air-impermeable is meant not substantially permeable to air-borne sound.
  • the sheet 0 facing elements there may be a plurality of the sheet 0 facing elements.
  • another sheet l3 may be disposed between the member H and the element l2.
  • This element l3, as well as the elements I4 and I5 may be of the kind described in connection with the element l2.
  • Particularly desirable results have been obtained when there is used a thick hair felt ll, say, one made by the so-called punching process, a partially saturated rag felt constituting the element l3 and made, for instance, as described in U. S. Patent 2,008,654 issued to Clarvoe on July 16, 1935, and copper foil as the outer facing l2 exposed directly to the incident sound.
  • the soundabsorbing felt II is disposed between the facing element l4 and a backing element l5.
  • the sheet elements l2, l3, l4, and I5 are vibratile and capable of movement relatively. to said member over the entire area of said member and not adhered or otherwise secured thereto. These elements suitably lie normally directly upon or against the face of the member H or upon each other. When there is used a plurality of facing elements on one side of the damping material,
  • the rearwardly disposed of the said elements that is, the element I3, may be in contact on its face with the element I2 and on its back with the damping member I I.
  • the acoustical article or assembly described may be associated with supporting frame members, such as the wooden or metal furring strips I6, defining therebetween a space to receive the sound-absorbing material.
  • the outer or both of the sheet elements I2 and I3 or I4 and I5 may extend at their edge portions overthe frame members and be secured thereto, as by the fasteners II.
  • a substantially air-impermeable base or wall I9 coacting with the strips I6 constitute suitable means for confining air behind the vibratile sheet disposed over, that is, in front of or against the felt.
  • This wall defines a space 20 with the sheet backing element I5, Fig. 2, that is, with that side of one of the readily vibratile sheets that is away from the member II, as illustrated.
  • The. elements I2, I3, Id, and I5 are of high damping coefficient, as distinguished, for example, from taut drum-like membranes that, once set in vibration, tend to continue vibrating after the impulse originating the vibration is ended.
  • the elements are readily vibratile, by which term is meant adapted to be set in vibration by incident sound of usual intensity.
  • they are of natural vibration frequency, that is, in the finished assembly, of the order of the predominant frequency of the sound to be absorbed.
  • the member I I or otherelement if disposed in contact with the back of the vibrating element serves to damp the vibration of that element.
  • the intermediate element I3 may damp the other element I2 while being itself, in turn, damped by the member I I.
  • the elements I2 and I3, whether vibrating jointly or singly, have a natural vibration frequency that is diifeignt from the frequency of the sound absorbed preferentially, that is, at maximum efliciency, by the member II.
  • a suitable adhesive as, for example, a bituminous, rubber, or resinous cement.
  • the other of the elements should be of relatively greater mass and damping efiiciency.
  • a construction of this kind is to be distinguished from a somewhat similar article in which a facing element is adhered practically continuously to the face of a damping material such as the felt II.
  • a facing element is adhered practically continuously to the face of a damping material such as the felt II.
  • the facing element is not free to vibratev independently of the felt, there has'been observed loss in effectiveness of absorption of sound of certain frequencies.
  • the embodiment shown in 2 may use between the vibratile elements a relatively thin felt
  • a sound-absorbing article comprising two readily vibratile air-impermeable sheets and a sound-absorbing and vibration-damping member disposed therebetween, the said sheets being arranged to Vibrate relatively to said member and when vibrating to be in free contact with the said member over major and continuous portions of their areas.
  • a sound-absorbing article comprising a base
  • a sound-absorbing article comprising a base, a thin, substantially air-impermeable, metal facing element disposed over and in spaced relationship to said base, said element being freely vibratile under the influence of incident sound, a compressible, fibrous vibration-damping member confined behind said element and capable of independent movement relatively to said element over the entire area of said member, said member being in contact with the major portion of the area of the element when the latter is vibrating, whereby said member serves to damp vibrations of said element, and independent means defining a predetermined area supporting said element from said base.
  • a sound-absorbing article comprising a base, a vibratile diaphragm comprising substantially air-impermeable superposed sheets disposed over and in spaced relationship to said base, a compressible, fibrous sound-absorbing member confined behind said superposed sheets and capable of independent movement relatively tosaid sheets over the entire area of said member, said member being in contact with the major portion of the area of the adjacent of said sheets when said diaphragm is vibrating, whereby said member serves to damp vibrations of said sheet, and independent means defining a predetermined area supporting said diaphragm from said base.
  • a sound-absorbing article comprising a base, a substantially air-impermeable vibratile sheet disposed over and in spaced relationship to said base and exposed on its face to the sound to be absorbed, a compressible, fibrous vibrationdamping member behind said sheet and capable of independent movement relatively to said sheet over the entire area of said member, saidmemher being sound-absorbing and said sheet, as assembled in the article, having a natural vibration frequency different from the frequency of the sound absorbed most effectively by said member, said member being in contact with the major portion of the area of the sheet when the latter is vibrating, whereby said member serves to damp said vibrations of said sheet, independent means defining a predetermined area supporting said sheet from said base, and means confining air behind said member.
  • a sound-absorbing article comprising a base, a substantially air-impermeable vibratile sheet disposed over and in spaced relationship to said base and exposed on its face to the sound to be absorbed, said sheet having a natural vibration frequency of the order of the predominate frequency of the sound to be absorbed, and a compressible, fibrous, sound-absorbing, vibrationdamping member confined behind said sheet and capable of independent movement relatively to said sheet over the entire area of said member, said member being in contact with the major portion of the area of the sheet when the latter is vibrating, whereby said member serves to damp vibrations of said sheet, independent means defining a predetermined area supporting said sheet from said base, and means for confining air behind said member.

Landscapes

  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Acoustics & Sound (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Architecture (AREA)
  • Electromagnetism (AREA)
  • Civil Engineering (AREA)
  • Structural Engineering (AREA)
  • Building Environments (AREA)

Description

Aug. 15, 1939. J. 5. PARKINSON SOUND ABSORBING ARTICLE Filed Dec. 19, 1956 INVENTOR John 5. Parkinson.
ATTORNEY Patented Aug. 15,1939
PATENT OFFICE SOUND-ABSORBING ARTICLE John S. Parkinson,
Somerville, N. J., assignor to Johns-Manville Corporation, New York, N. Y., a corporation of New York Application December 19, 1936, Serial No. 116,709
8 Claims.
This invention relates to a sound absorbing article. More particularly, this invention relates to a sound-absorbing article which can be employed as an acoustical treatment for a room,
- auditorium, or the like.
A number of sound-absorbing articles heretofore used have included perforated or porous facing elements permitting incident sound to pass therethrough to a rearwardly disposed soundabsorbing member. Cleaning the face of such articles by Washing may involve wetting the sound absorbing material, and breathing of air through the perforations may cause uneven deposition of dirt, unless a special antibreathing 5 sound absorbent is used.
The majority of sound-absorbing articles show a preferential absorption or peak of effectiveness when the sound to be absorbed is of a given frequency, with a decrease in efficiency, when the frequency of the sound to be absorbed is lower or higher than the optimum for the material used. The result is frequently distortional of the original quality of the sound.
It is an object of the present invention to pro- 25, vide a sound absorbing article having a facing element that may be readily washed or otherwise cleaned without injury to the sound absorbing material therebehind. Another object is to provide a sound absorbing article having a facing 3&- element that does not permit breathing or passage otherwise of air in substantial amount therethrough. A further object is to provide a construction which is less selective in sound ab sorption than an element showing a sharp peak 35 of absorption at a given frequency.
In general, the invention comprises the novel features of the sound-absorbing article herein described, the term article including construction or assembly. More particularly, the inven- 40. tion comprises an acoustical article in which a readily vibratile, air-impermeable sheet is disposed in contact, over the major portion of its area, preferably, substantially continuously, with a vibration-damping material, the said sheet being not adhered over the said major portion of the damping material. One embodiment comprises two air-impermeable readily vibratile sheets and a layer of vibration-damping and, suitably, sound-absorbing material disposed 1 therebehind or therebetween, the sheets again being non-adhered and not otherwise secured as before. The invention comprises, also, a soundabsorbing article including a member, as, for example, a felt, adapted to absorb preferentially 55; sound of a given frequenc a vibratile facing sheet disposed in front of the said member, contacting therewith at close intervals, but not adhered thereto over the major portion of its area, and means confining air behind the said sheet, the said sheet in the article described having a 5 natural vibration frequency different from the frequency of the sound preferentially absorbed by the said member.
The invention is illustrated in the attached drawing and will be described for the purpose of 10 exemplification in connectiomtherewlth.
Fig. 1 is a cross sectional view of my improved article.
Fig. 2 is a cross sectional view of a modification of the invention. 15
There is shown a vibration-damping member II that is suitably light in weight, readily yieldable, and adapted to absorb sound. This member may include a porous felt of hair, mineral wool, or like material.
Disposed over the said member is a thin readily. vibratile sheet facing element (membrane) H for which I have used to advantage a metal foil, such as three-ounce copper, paper, or other substantially air-impermeable sheet material, as, for instance, lightweight tar paper or asphaltimpregnated roofing felt. By air-impermeable is meant not substantially permeable to air-borne sound.
If desired, there may be a plurality of the sheet 0 facing elements. Thus, another sheet l3 may be disposed between the member H and the element l2. This element l3, as well as the elements I4 and I5 (see Fig. 2), may be of the kind described in connection with the element l2. Particularly desirable results have been obtained when there is used a thick hair felt ll, say, one made by the so-called punching process, a partially saturated rag felt constituting the element l3 and made, for instance, as described in U. S. Patent 2,008,654 issued to Clarvoe on July 16, 1935, and copper foil as the outer facing l2 exposed directly to the incident sound.
In the modification shown in Fig. 2, the soundabsorbing felt II is disposed between the facing element l4 and a backing element l5.
In these embodiments of the invention, the sheet elements l2, l3, l4, and I5 are vibratile and capable of movement relatively. to said member over the entire area of said member and not adhered or otherwise secured thereto. These elements suitably lie normally directly upon or against the face of the member H or upon each other. When there is used a plurality of facing elements on one side of the damping material,
as illustrated in Fig. 1, the rearwardly disposed of the said elements, that is, the element I3, may be in contact on its face with the element I2 and on its back with the damping member I I.
In. a typical construction, the acoustical article or assembly described may be associated with supporting frame members, such as the wooden or metal furring strips I6, defining therebetween a space to receive the sound-absorbing material. The outer or both of the sheet elements I2 and I3 or I4 and I5 may extend at their edge portions overthe frame members and be secured thereto, as by the fasteners II.
A substantially air-impermeable base or wall I9 coacting with the strips I6 constitute suitable means for confining air behind the vibratile sheet disposed over, that is, in front of or against the felt. This wall defines a space 20 with the sheet backing element I5, Fig. 2, that is, with that side of one of the readily vibratile sheets that is away from the member II, as illustrated.
The. elements I2, I3, Id, and I5 are of high damping coefficient, as distinguished, for example, from taut drum-like membranes that, once set in vibration, tend to continue vibrating after the impulse originating the vibration is ended. The elements are readily vibratile, by which term is meant adapted to be set in vibration by incident sound of usual intensity. Suitably, they are of natural vibration frequency, that is, in the finished assembly, of the order of the predominant frequency of the sound to be absorbed.
When sound is incident upon one of these elements and vibration is set up therein, the element, because of its high damping coeiiicient, tends to lose its vibration. A part of the energy used in initiating the vibration is, therefore, lost. A portion-of the sound is reflected from the element and another porition is transmitted by vibration of the element. This latter portion of the sound has access to the member II which, if a porous felt of the kind described, absorbs the sound in large measure.
In addition, the member I I or otherelement if disposed in contact with the back of the vibrating element, serves to damp the vibration of that element. When there is used the combination including a plurality of sheet elements, as shown in Fig. 1, the intermediate element I3 may damp the other element I2 while being itself, in turn, damped by the member I I.
The elements I2 and I3, whether vibrating jointly or singly, have a natural vibration frequency that is diifeignt from the frequency of the sound absorbed preferentially, that is, at maximum efliciency, by the member II.
When the elements I2 and I3 are secured together, there is used a suitable adhesive (not shown), as, for example, a bituminous, rubber, or resinous cement.
If one of these is particularly light in weight and of low damping efficiency, then the other of the elements should be of relatively greater mass and damping efiiciency.
A construction of this kind is to be distinguished from a somewhat similar article in which a facing element is adhered practically continuously to the face of a damping material such as the felt II. In this latter case, in which the facing element is not free to vibratev independently of the felt, there has'been observed loss in effectiveness of absorption of sound of certain frequencies.
This distinction is illustrated by the following comparative data for sound-absorbing articles including each a three-fourths inch f l 31$ the member II, 12-pound asphalt-impregnated roofing paper as element I3, and two-ounce copper sheeting as the element I2. In the articles, the facing element I2 was adhered to the intermediate element I3 which, in one case, was adhered to the member I I, the adherence being substantially continuous. In the other case, the element I3, was capable of free movement relatively to the member II over the entire area thereof. The elements I2 and I3 jointly constitute the vibratile member referred to in the following-table showing the sound-absorption results.
Absorption of sound, percent Predominating frequency of the incident sound. cycles per Vibratile gggg gg sec n member tialiy continuadheed to ously to member member 11 n upon the element I5 of necessity, will pass first through the damping member II. When this latter member is sound-absorbing, in accordance with the preferred practice of the invention,
sounds that are particularly difficult to absorb in ordinary constructions such as the felt alone, namely, the sounds of very low frequency will predominate in the sound impinging upon element I5.
The embodiment shown in 2 may use between the vibratile elements a relatively thin felt,
as, for instance, one of about one-fourth to onehalf inch thickness or less.
It. will be understood that the details given are for the purpose of illustration, not restriction,
and that variations within the spirit of the invention are intended to be included in the scope of the appended claims.
What I claim is:
1. A sound-absorbing article comprising two readily vibratile air-impermeable sheets and a sound-absorbing and vibration-damping member disposed therebetween, the said sheets being arranged to Vibrate relatively to said member and when vibrating to be in free contact with the said member over major and continuous portions of their areas.
2. A sound-absorbing article as described in claim 1, including means confining air on the side of one of the said sheets away from the said member.
I 3. A sound-absorbing article as described in claim 1, the said vibratile sheets being of different natural vibration frequencies and the one of the sheets of higher natural vibration frequency being exposed on its outer face to the sound to be absorbed, so that the sound incident upon the other sheet, of lower frequency of vibration, will have passed through the said member before impinging upon the said other sheet.
4. A sound-absorbing article comprising a base,
a substantially air-impermeable vibratile sheet vibrating, whereby said member serves to damp vibrations of said sheet, and independent means 7 defining a predetermined area supporting said sheet from said base.
5. A sound-absorbing article comprising a base, a thin, substantially air-impermeable, metal facing element disposed over and in spaced relationship to said base, said element being freely vibratile under the influence of incident sound, a compressible, fibrous vibration-damping member confined behind said element and capable of independent movement relatively to said element over the entire area of said member, said member being in contact with the major portion of the area of the element when the latter is vibrating, whereby said member serves to damp vibrations of said element, and independent means defining a predetermined area supporting said element from said base.
6. A sound-absorbing article comprising a base, a vibratile diaphragm comprising substantially air-impermeable superposed sheets disposed over and in spaced relationship to said base, a compressible, fibrous sound-absorbing member confined behind said superposed sheets and capable of independent movement relatively tosaid sheets over the entire area of said member, said member being in contact with the major portion of the area of the adjacent of said sheets when said diaphragm is vibrating, whereby said member serves to damp vibrations of said sheet, and independent means defining a predetermined area supporting said diaphragm from said base.
7. A sound-absorbing article comprising a base, a substantially air-impermeable vibratile sheet disposed over and in spaced relationship to said base and exposed on its face to the sound to be absorbed, a compressible, fibrous vibrationdamping member behind said sheet and capable of independent movement relatively to said sheet over the entire area of said member, saidmemher being sound-absorbing and said sheet, as assembled in the article, having a natural vibration frequency different from the frequency of the sound absorbed most effectively by said member, said member being in contact with the major portion of the area of the sheet when the latter is vibrating, whereby said member serves to damp said vibrations of said sheet, independent means defining a predetermined area supporting said sheet from said base, and means confining air behind said member.
8. A sound-absorbing article comprising a base, a substantially air-impermeable vibratile sheet disposed over and in spaced relationship to said base and exposed on its face to the sound to be absorbed, said sheet having a natural vibration frequency of the order of the predominate frequency of the sound to be absorbed, and a compressible, fibrous, sound-absorbing, vibrationdamping member confined behind said sheet and capable of independent movement relatively to said sheet over the entire area of said member, said member being in contact with the major portion of the area of the sheet when the latter is vibrating, whereby said member serves to damp vibrations of said sheet, independent means defining a predetermined area supporting said sheet from said base, and means for confining air behind said member.
JOHN S. PARKINSON.
US116709A 1936-12-19 1936-12-19 Sound-absorbing article Expired - Lifetime US2169370A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US116709A US2169370A (en) 1936-12-19 1936-12-19 Sound-absorbing article

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US116709A US2169370A (en) 1936-12-19 1936-12-19 Sound-absorbing article

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2169370A true US2169370A (en) 1939-08-15

Family

ID=22368753

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US116709A Expired - Lifetime US2169370A (en) 1936-12-19 1936-12-19 Sound-absorbing article

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2169370A (en)

Cited By (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2657759A (en) * 1951-11-07 1953-11-03 Charles C Creamer Acoustic block or tile
US2811216A (en) * 1954-04-28 1957-10-29 Harris Transducer Corp Acoustic baffle construction
US3183996A (en) * 1959-09-04 1965-05-18 Forty Eight Insulations Inc Acoustical structural panel
EP0742322A1 (en) * 1995-05-08 1996-11-13 Metzeler Schaum Gmbh Sound damping device
US20080164093A1 (en) * 2005-03-17 2008-07-10 Swcc Showa Device Technology Co., Ltd. Sound Absorbing Material and Structure Using the Same
US10900222B2 (en) * 2018-02-17 2021-01-26 Kyler Smith Special lightweight, durable mounting system for sound foam panel and quick installation process

Cited By (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2657759A (en) * 1951-11-07 1953-11-03 Charles C Creamer Acoustic block or tile
US2811216A (en) * 1954-04-28 1957-10-29 Harris Transducer Corp Acoustic baffle construction
US3183996A (en) * 1959-09-04 1965-05-18 Forty Eight Insulations Inc Acoustical structural panel
EP0742322A1 (en) * 1995-05-08 1996-11-13 Metzeler Schaum Gmbh Sound damping device
US20080164093A1 (en) * 2005-03-17 2008-07-10 Swcc Showa Device Technology Co., Ltd. Sound Absorbing Material and Structure Using the Same
US10900222B2 (en) * 2018-02-17 2021-01-26 Kyler Smith Special lightweight, durable mounting system for sound foam panel and quick installation process

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2177393A (en) Sound absorbing structure
US2160638A (en) Sound-absorbing unit
US1918149A (en) Sound transmitting and sound absorbing construction
US1726500A (en) Sound-deadening construction
US2159488A (en) Perforated membrane
US2308869A (en) Acoustic wall panel
US2410413A (en) Acoustic tile
US2990027A (en) Composite sound absorber
US1972563A (en) Acoustic construction
GB1579897A (en) Sound absorber
US2113128A (en) Sound insulation
JPH09510303A (en) Foil sound absorber
US2169370A (en) Sound-absorbing article
US2045311A (en) Acoustical wall covering
KR20190093989A (en) A improved sound absorption panel for construction
JPH0444279B2 (en)
US2029441A (en) Acoustical structure
US2397609A (en) Communication booth
US2081952A (en) Acoustical construction
US2081765A (en) Acoustical structure
US2057071A (en) Sound insulation and material therefor
US2363068A (en) Sound barrier wall or door construction
US3351154A (en) Acoustical panel with cellular lattice embedded into sound absorptive element
US2081953A (en) Sound damping structure
US2060241A (en) Sound absorbing structure