US3253674A - Ceramic microphone - Google Patents

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US3253674A
US3253674A US137345A US13734561A US3253674A US 3253674 A US3253674 A US 3253674A US 137345 A US137345 A US 137345A US 13734561 A US13734561 A US 13734561A US 3253674 A US3253674 A US 3253674A
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impedance
microphone
bender
diaphragm
frequency
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Peter C Desmares
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Zenith Electronics LLC
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Zenith Radio Corp
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    • GPHYSICS
    • G10MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS; ACOUSTICS
    • G10KSOUND-PRODUCING DEVICES; METHODS OR DEVICES FOR PROTECTING AGAINST, OR FOR DAMPING, NOISE OR OTHER ACOUSTIC WAVES IN GENERAL; ACOUSTICS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • G10K11/00Methods or devices for transmitting, conducting or directing sound in general; Methods or devices for protecting against, or for damping, noise or other acoustic waves in general
    • G10K11/02Mechanical acoustic impedances; Impedance matching, e.g. by horns; Acoustic resonators
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10STECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10S181/00Acoustics
    • Y10S181/40Wave coupling

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  • This invention relates to electromechanical transducers in general and is particularly concerned with the construction of an improved transducer arrangement for effecting energy transfer to or from a Wave-propagating medium which exhibits a materially different impedance at a given signal frequency than the mechanical impedance of the transducer itself.
  • Transducers of the type under consideration are frequently employed for the purpose of transferring acoustic signal energy from air or other wave-propagating mediums to a wave signal receiver. Because of the recip rocal properties of wave signal reception and transmission, the teachings hereof may be advantageously applied to transmitting as well as to receiving systems.
  • the invention is espectially suited for use in remote control systems wherein a controlled or satellite station executes any of several control functions depending upon the frequency of the command signal transmitted by the controlling station. Therefore, for convenience of illustration, the ensuing detailed description will be directed to a microphone and transmitter for that application.
  • a very successful remote control system featuring the use of a multiplicity of command signals, distinguishable from one another by the frequency of the transmitted energy, is the subject of the United States Letters Patent 2,817,025, issued on December 17, 1957 in the name of Robert Adler and assigned to the same assignee as the present invention.
  • the controlled device is atelevision receiver in which the functions of on-off switching, channel selection and sound muting are accomplished by remote control. It is necessary that the controlled receiver be as insensitive to false actuation as practicable or, expressed in other words, it must be relatively free from actuation in response to interference from spurious signals that may be encountered in the vicinity of the controlled receiver.
  • the controlled station has a narrow acceptance band and is thus able to reject, on the basis of frequency discrimination, interfering signals which do not fall within its acceptance band.
  • the command signals may be included in the frequency range from 38 to 42 kilocycles and the controlled device only responds to this small band of frequencies.
  • Some microphones used in remote control receivers have been of an electrostatic type. It is desirable to use a piezoelectric type microphone because of its potentially greater sensitivity.
  • a piezeoelectric microphone has the disadvantage of poor impedance match to the wave-propagating medium, especially if this medium is air; in addition, such a microphone usually has a rather sharp acoustical response peak.
  • a piezoelectric microphone of improved construction which provides good impedance matching and a relatively flat response, thereby remedying certain of the above defects, is described and claimed in a copending application of Robert Adler, Serial No. 735,548, filed May 15, 1958, now Patent No. 3,058,539,- entitled Ceramic Microphone with Impedance- Matching Bridge, and assigned to the present assignee.
  • the Adler microphone comprises a piezoelectric or similar bender which is coupled to a matching device in order to obtain a better match between the transducer and the medium into which it transduces.
  • the matching device comprises a U-shaped resonant bridge having its free ends bent toward and secured to one of the'fiat sur- 3,253,674 Patented May 31,1966
  • the bridge In addition to its improved impedance matching, the bridge also provides a flat response peak which is ordinarily characteristic of such a device. While the Adler microphone has performed admirably, simplification of construction and increased transformation efiiciency are desirable aims.
  • An arrangement of the above type for effecting transfer of acoustical energy with respect to a medium having a predetermined acoustical impedance at a given signal frequency comprises an internally apertured electromechanical transducer having a vibratory frequency of mechanical resonance approximately equal to the desired signal frequency and a mechanical impedance at the signal frequency which is high relative to the impedance of the medium.
  • a mechanical impedance transformation device comprises a mechanically resonant diaphragm which is disposed in the plane of the transducer, exposed to the medium through the aperture, has an impedance at the signal frequency intermediate that of the transducer and the medium, and has a frequency of flexural resonance corresponding to the resonant frequency of the transducer.
  • the diaphragm and transducer constitute a mechanical impedance transformer which is the analogue of an electrical impedance transformer for converting between parallel and series resonant impedance relationships.
  • FIGURE 1 is a view, in vertical section, of a microphone assembly embodying the present invention
  • FIGURE 2 is an enlarged perspective view of a portion of FIGURE 1 showing in detail how the microphone is mounted in the microphone assembly;
  • FIGURE 3 is an enlarged sectional view taken along line 3-3 of FIGURE 2;
  • FIGURE 4 shows a modification of the microphone structure shown in FIGURE 3, utilizing a different impedance matching device
  • FIGURE 5 is an elevation view, partially cut away, showing still another modification of an impedance matching device
  • FIGURE 6 is a sectional view taken along line 66 of FIGURE 5;
  • FIGURE 7 is a sectional view taken along line 7-7 of FIGURE 5.
  • FIGURE 1 there is depicted a microphone for effecting transfer of ultrasonic energy with respect to air, which has a predetermined acoustical impedance at a given signal frequency.
  • Air like any wave signal propagating medium, has a characteristic or acoustical impedance at sonic frequencies which may be described as the ratio of force to velocity of volume flow in a distributed medium.
  • the difiiculty encountered in achieving a piezoelectric cerarnic microphone of high sensitivity is in effecting a good impedance match between the piezoelectric element and the air, because of the fact that the mechanical impedance of the ceramic element is very much higher than the impedance of air at the signal frequency.
  • Air is a light medium, is easy to move and experiences a large displacement in response to a relatively small moving force, whereas a piezoelectric transducer is very hard to move and is a heavy device compared with air. It yields but little and experiences only a small displacement in response to the application of a relatively large moving force.
  • a salient feature incorporated into the invention is an improved structure which, in effect, bridges such dissimilar 'impedances to attain an efficient coupling therebetween. This is accomplished through the agency of an auxiliary mechanical device which is itself heavier than air and yet lighter than the piezoelectric element.
  • the matching structure is further characterized by a frequency of mechanical resonance matching that of the piezoelectric element and it is connected to that element to define therewith a mechanical structure which is the full equivalent of an electrical impedance transformation net- Work converting between series and parallel impedance in a resonant circuit.
  • a structure which accomplishes the above matching is, as mentioned above, described and claimed in the Adler oopencling application.
  • the present application provides an improved matching structure which has several advantages as will be described below.
  • the microphone structure of the embodiment of the invention under consideration comprises a fiexural-mode piezoelectric element :or bender 10.
  • a piezoelectric bender is a device which illustratively has two piezoelectric plates or wafers having such relative polarization and electrical connection through an electrode structure that electrical signals developed in response to bending are additively related.
  • the bender is made up of two plates 11 and 12, of a material having a high electro-mechanical coupling factor, in order to provide a high efliciency of energy transfer between the electrical and mechanical actions.
  • the class of materials known as titanates is particularly suited for use in such wafers. These compositions, such as barium titanate and strontium titanate, are frequently employed as transducers.
  • Piezoelectric plates 11, 12 are circular in shape and have silvered surfaces 13 completely covering both sides.
  • the silvered surfaces serve two purposes: first, they act as electrodes through which a uni-directional potential is applied to the plate for the purpose of establishing a permanent polarization in a given direct-ion in the thickness mode as indicated by the arrows in FIGURE 3; secondly, the silvered surfaces constitute contact points for the output leads of the microphone.
  • the piezoelectric plates individually are polarized in opposed directions.
  • the bender consisting of piezoelectric plates 11 and 12 has a hole 15 through its center.
  • the mechanical impedance transformation device of the invention comprises a mechanically resonant diaphragm disposed in the plane of the transducer and exposed to the air through hole 15. More specifically, a thin circular piece of metallic foil 16 is sandwiched between piezoelectric plates 11 and 12 to couple the bender 10 to air.
  • an adhesive is placed on both sides of the diaphragm to permanently unite plates 11 and 12, forming bender 10.
  • the cemented edges of the diaphragm extend to the outer diameter of bender 10. This is done to simplify construction; actually the diaphragm need be affixed only to a small portion of the bender. Since diaphragm 16 is disposed in the plane of bender 10, no
  • a diaphragm as used in this context may be defined as a thin flexible sheet that can be moved by sound waves, as in a microphone, or can produce sound waves when moved, as in a loudspeaker.
  • the diaphragm has an acoustical impedance at a predetermined signal frequency intermediate that of the transducer and the air.
  • the frequency of fiexural resonance of diaphragm 16 corresponds to the resonance frequency of the transducer and is inversely proportional to the size of aperture 15. In the specific case of the circular aperture, the frequency of fiexural resonance varies as the inverse square of the diameter of hole 15. Of course, this assumes that the thickness of the diaphragm is constant since the resonant frequency is also proportional to the dimension.
  • Bender 10 with its impedance matching diaphragm 16, is housed within a mounting structure, as shown in FIGURE 1, comprising a base 17 and a cap 18 both formed of an insulating material such as polystyrene.
  • Base 17 has a centrally located recess 20.
  • Cap 18 has a central aperture which in conjunction with recess 20 of base 17 defines a cavity for receiving the bender-diaphragm assembly.
  • Bender 10 itself is mounted on an electrode 21, as shown in FIGURE 2, which has a circular aperture 23 adapted to receive the bender and make electrical contact with plate 11.
  • the electrode and its mounted bender are retained on base 17 by cap 18.
  • Another output lead 25 of the bender is cemented to the opposite plate 12, preferably at a nodal circle to present a minimum resistance to vibration.
  • Diaphragm 16 and bender 10 are coupled to air through a tapered horn 26.
  • the dimensions of the mouth of the horn are selected in accordance with the requirements of the signalling system in which the microphone is to be employed, In the case of a microphone for use with remotely controlled television receivers, a horn design found to have acceptable directivity is one having a mount dimension one wave-length in the horizontal direction and two wave-lengths in the vertical direction.
  • the throat of the horn communicates with diaphragm 16 through an acoustical impedance matching section 27 which is a tubular space having a length of A1 wave-length at the signal frequency.
  • a flange plate 28 mechanically secured to the mouth of the horn is fastened to base 17 and cap 18 by means of fasteners 30.
  • Fasteners 30 also serve the function of retaining cap 18 against base 17, thus holding electrode 21 in place and in addition retaining an electrode 31, as shown in FIGURE 1, against cap assembly 18 to which lead 25 is attached.
  • an ultrasonic radiated signal reaching horn 26 is channeled through the quarterwave impedance matching section 27 to impinge upon diaphragm 16.
  • the received sonic signal constitutes a small force applied to the resonant diaphragm to set it into fiexural mode vibration.
  • the small force applied to the center of the diaphragm produces a displacement of large amplitude and results in a much larger force appearing around the edge of the diaphragm.
  • This large force developed at the edge is applied to the bender and results in its displacement or bending,
  • This displacement is of much smaller amplitude than that experienced by the diaphragm in view of the high mechanical impedance of the bender, but, nonetheless, establishes fiexural mode vibration therein of an amplitude considerably larger than that which would have resulted had the bender been directly exposed to the acoustic pressure.
  • the mechanical bending action, through piezoelectrical conversion results in an electrical signal appearing on electrodes 21 and 31.
  • FIGURE 4 A modified microphone is shown in FIGURE 4, where, instead of sandwiching diaphragm 16 between plates 11 and 12, a cup-shaped diaphragm 32 has its sides cemented to the sides of hole 15.
  • This embodiment is advantageous in that there is greater flexibility in the placement of the diaphragm within hole 15, The operation of the device is in all respects similar to that of the embodiment of FIGURES 13.
  • FIGURES 57 Still another embodiment is shown in FIGURES 57 where a rectangular bender is utilized with a rectangular hole having a rectangular diaphragm 16 which is clamped at two ends 35 and 36 as shown in dashed outline in FIGURE 5 and in FIGURE 7.
  • Bender 10' is suspended 1n the microphone housing by means of two thin flexible sheets 37 and 38 which extend from the edges of the bender and are clamped between the respective plates.
  • the individual piezoelectric plates are polarized longitudinally in contrast to the thickness polarization shown in FIGURE 3; the operation is similar to that of the embodiment of FIGURES 1-3.
  • the frequency of fiexural resonance is inversely proportional to the square of the length of one side of the rectangular hole.
  • a further modification of the embodiment of FIGURES 5-7 may be made by clamping diaphragm 16' at only one end thus allowing the diaphragm to vibrate in a free-clamped mode,
  • the microphone of the present invention is more compact. Also, the sandwiching of the impedance matching diaphragm between the plates of the bender, or as in FIGURE 4 the cementing of the sides of the diaphragm to the bender, results in a more shock-resistant, structurally stronger microphone.
  • the band width of a microphone of this type is related to the mass of the impedance matching diaphragm.
  • the type of construction disclosed provides greater variety in choice of band width since the impedance matching structure can be made with less mass.
  • An arrangement for effecting transfer of acoustical energy with respect to a medium having a predetermined acoustical impedance at a given signal frequency comprising: a fiexural element comprising two piezoelectric plates including means defining at least one hole therein and having a vibratory frequency of mechancial resonance approximately equal to said signal frequency and a mechanical impedance at said signal frequency which is high relative to the impedance of said medium; a mechanical impedance-transformation device sandwiched between said piezoelectric plates for coupling said flexural element to said medium and comprising a mechanically resonant vibrator element exposed to said medium through said hole in said fiexural element and having an impedance at said signal frequency intermediate that of said fiexural element and said medium and a frequency of fiexural resonance corresponding to that of said flexural element, said fiexural element and said vibrator element constituting a mechanical impedance transformer which is the analogue of an electrical impedance transformer for converting between parallel and series resonant im

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Description

y 1966 P. c. DESMARES 3,253,674
CERAMIC MICROPHONE Filed Sept. 11, 1961 30 FIG! 25 n" 1 I! W I 775 ,4 \7//7/7///{/ /5 INVENTOR J ,3 Fe fer a D6777CZT5 BY Dffiuh (/4 fig.
United States Patent 3,253,674 CERAMIC MICROPHONE Peter C. Desmares, Franklin Park, Ill., assignor to Zenith Radio Corporation, a corporation of Delaware Filed Sept. 11, 1961, Ser. No. 137,345 1 Claim. (Cl. 181-.5)
This invention relates to electromechanical transducers in general and is particularly concerned with the construction of an improved transducer arrangement for effecting energy transfer to or from a Wave-propagating medium which exhibits a materially different impedance at a given signal frequency than the mechanical impedance of the transducer itself.
Transducers of the type under consideration are frequently employed for the purpose of transferring acoustic signal energy from air or other wave-propagating mediums to a wave signal receiver. Because of the recip rocal properties of wave signal reception and transmission, the teachings hereof may be advantageously applied to transmitting as well as to receiving systems. The invention is espectially suited for use in remote control systems wherein a controlled or satellite station executes any of several control functions depending upon the frequency of the command signal transmitted by the controlling station. Therefore, for convenience of illustration, the ensuing detailed description will be directed to a microphone and transmitter for that application.
For example, a very successful remote control system featuring the use of a multiplicity of command signals, distinguishable from one another by the frequency of the transmitted energy, is the subject of the United States Letters Patent 2,817,025, issued on December 17, 1957 in the name of Robert Adler and assigned to the same assignee as the present invention. As there described, the controlled device is atelevision receiver in which the functions of on-off switching, channel selection and sound muting are accomplished by remote control. It is necessary that the controlled receiver be as insensitive to false actuation as practicable or, expressed in other words, it must be relatively free from actuation in response to interference from spurious signals that may be encountered in the vicinity of the controlled receiver. To that end, the controlled station has a narrow acceptance band and is thus able to reject, on the basis of frequency discrimination, interfering signals which do not fall within its acceptance band. By Way of illustration, the command signals may be included in the frequency range from 38 to 42 kilocycles and the controlled device only responds to this small band of frequencies.
Some microphones used in remote control receivers have been of an electrostatic type. It is desirable to use a piezoelectric type microphone because of its potentially greater sensitivity. However, a piezeoelectric microphone has the disadvantage of poor impedance match to the wave-propagating medium, especially if this medium is air; in addition, such a microphone usually has a rather sharp acoustical response peak. A piezoelectric microphone of improved construction which provides good impedance matching and a relatively flat response, thereby remedying certain of the above defects, is described and claimed in a copending application of Robert Adler, Serial No. 735,548, filed May 15, 1958, now Patent No. 3,058,539,- entitled Ceramic Microphone with Impedance- Matching Bridge, and assigned to the present assignee.
The Adler microphone comprises a piezoelectric or similar bender which is coupled to a matching device in order to obtain a better match between the transducer and the medium into which it transduces. In a specific embodiment as applied to a typical bender, the matching device comprises a U-shaped resonant bridge having its free ends bent toward and secured to one of the'fiat sur- 3,253,674 Patented May 31,1966
faces of the bender along the fiexural lines thereof. In addition to its improved impedance matching, the bridge also provides a flat response peak which is ordinarily characteristic of such a device. While the Adler microphone has performed admirably, simplification of construction and increased transformation efiiciency are desirable aims.
Accordingly, it is an object of the present invention to i provide an improved electromechanical transducer.
It is another object of this invention to provide an improved electromechanical -transducer which exhibits increased band width.
It is yet another object of this invention to provide an improved electromechanical transducer which is compact.
It is a further object if this invention to provide a piezoelectric microphone which has improved shock resistance.
An arrangement of the above type for effecting transfer of acoustical energy with respect to a medium having a predetermined acoustical impedance at a given signal frequency comprises an internally apertured electromechanical transducer having a vibratory frequency of mechanical resonance approximately equal to the desired signal frequency and a mechanical impedance at the signal frequency which is high relative to the impedance of the medium. A mechanical impedance transformation device comprises a mechanically resonant diaphragm which is disposed in the plane of the transducer, exposed to the medium through the aperture, has an impedance at the signal frequency intermediate that of the transducer and the medium, and has a frequency of flexural resonance corresponding to the resonant frequency of the transducer. The diaphragm and transducer constitute a mechanical impedance transformer which is the analogue of an electrical impedance transformer for converting between parallel and series resonant impedance relationships.
The features of the present invention which are believed to be novel are set forth with particularity in the appended claim. The organization and manner of operation of the invention, together with further objects and advantages thereof, may best be understood by reference to the following description taken in connection with the accompanying drawings, in the several figures of which like reference numerals identify like elements, and in which:
FIGURE 1 is a view, in vertical section, of a microphone assembly embodying the present invention;
FIGURE 2 is an enlarged perspective view of a portion of FIGURE 1 showing in detail how the microphone is mounted in the microphone assembly;
FIGURE 3 is an enlarged sectional view taken along line 3-3 of FIGURE 2;
FIGURE 4 shows a modification of the microphone structure shown in FIGURE 3, utilizing a different impedance matching device;
FIGURE 5 is an elevation view, partially cut away, showing still another modification of an impedance matching device;
FIGURE 6 is a sectional view taken along line 66 of FIGURE 5; and
FIGURE 7 is a sectional view taken along line 7-7 of FIGURE 5.
Referring now more particularly to the drawings, in FIGURE 1 there is depicted a microphone for effecting transfer of ultrasonic energy with respect to air, which has a predetermined acoustical impedance at a given signal frequency. Air, like any wave signal propagating medium, has a characteristic or acoustical impedance at sonic frequencies which may be described as the ratio of force to velocity of volume flow in a distributed medium. The difiiculty encountered in achieving a piezoelectric cerarnic microphone of high sensitivity is in effecting a good impedance match between the piezoelectric element and the air, because of the fact that the mechanical impedance of the ceramic element is very much higher than the impedance of air at the signal frequency. Air is a light medium, is easy to move and experiences a large displacement in response to a relatively small moving force, whereas a piezoelectric transducer is very hard to move and is a heavy device compared with air. It yields but little and experiences only a small displacement in response to the application of a relatively large moving force.
A salient feature incorporated into the invention is an improved structure which, in effect, bridges such dissimilar 'impedances to attain an efficient coupling therebetween. This is accomplished through the agency of an auxiliary mechanical device which is itself heavier than air and yet lighter than the piezoelectric element. The matching structure is further characterized by a frequency of mechanical resonance matching that of the piezoelectric element and it is connected to that element to define therewith a mechanical structure which is the full equivalent of an electrical impedance transformation net- Work converting between series and parallel impedance in a resonant circuit. A structure which accomplishes the above matching is, as mentioned above, described and claimed in the Adler oopencling application. The present application provides an improved matching structure which has several advantages as will be described below.
The microphone structure of the embodiment of the invention under consideration comprises a fiexural-mode piezoelectric element :or bender 10. A piezoelectric bender is a device which illustratively has two piezoelectric plates or wafers having such relative polarization and electrical connection through an electrode structure that electrical signals developed in response to bending are additively related. As detailed in FIG- URE 3, the bender is made up of two plates 11 and 12, of a material having a high electro-mechanical coupling factor, in order to provide a high efliciency of energy transfer between the electrical and mechanical actions. The class of materials known as titanates is particularly suited for use in such wafers. These compositions, such as barium titanate and strontium titanate, are frequently employed as transducers.
Piezoelectric plates 11, 12 are circular in shape and have silvered surfaces 13 completely covering both sides. The silvered surfaces serve two purposes: first, they act as electrodes through which a uni-directional potential is applied to the plate for the purpose of establishing a permanent polarization in a given direct-ion in the thickness mode as indicated by the arrows in FIGURE 3; secondly, the silvered surfaces constitute contact points for the output leads of the microphone. As here embodied, the piezoelectric plates individually are polarized in opposed directions.
As best shown in FIGURE 2, the bender consisting of piezoelectric plates 11 and 12 has a hole 15 through its center. The mechanical impedance transformation device of the invention comprises a mechanically resonant diaphragm disposed in the plane of the transducer and exposed to the air through hole 15. More specifically, a thin circular piece of metallic foil 16 is sandwiched between piezoelectric plates 11 and 12 to couple the bender 10 to air. Preferably, an adhesive is placed on both sides of the diaphragm to permanently unite plates 11 and 12, forming bender 10. As shown in FIG- URE 3, the cemented edges of the diaphragm extend to the outer diameter of bender 10. This is done to simplify construction; actually the diaphragm need be affixed only to a small portion of the bender. Since diaphragm 16 is disposed in the plane of bender 10, no
part of it protrudes above the outside surfaces of the bender, thereby making a more compact and durable structure.
A diaphragm as used in this context may be defined as a thin flexible sheet that can be moved by sound waves, as in a microphone, or can produce sound waves when moved, as in a loudspeaker. The diaphragm has an acoustical impedance at a predetermined signal frequency intermediate that of the transducer and the air. The frequency of fiexural resonance of diaphragm 16 corresponds to the resonance frequency of the transducer and is inversely proportional to the size of aperture 15. In the specific case of the circular aperture, the frequency of fiexural resonance varies as the inverse square of the diameter of hole 15. Of course, this assumes that the thickness of the diaphragm is constant since the resonant frequency is also proportional to the dimension.
Bender 10, with its impedance matching diaphragm 16, is housed within a mounting structure, as shown in FIGURE 1, comprising a base 17 and a cap 18 both formed of an insulating material such as polystyrene. Base 17 has a centrally located recess 20. Cap 18 has a central aperture which in conjunction with recess 20 of base 17 defines a cavity for receiving the bender-diaphragm assembly. Bender 10 itself is mounted on an electrode 21, as shown in FIGURE 2, which has a circular aperture 23 adapted to receive the bender and make electrical contact with plate 11. The electrode and its mounted bender are retained on base 17 by cap 18. Another output lead 25 of the bender is cemented to the opposite plate 12, preferably at a nodal circle to present a minimum resistance to vibration.
Diaphragm 16 and bender 10 are coupled to air through a tapered horn 26. The dimensions of the mouth of the horn are selected in accordance with the requirements of the signalling system in which the microphone is to be employed, In the case of a microphone for use with remotely controlled television receivers, a horn design found to have acceptable directivity is one having a mount dimension one wave-length in the horizontal direction and two wave-lengths in the vertical direction.
The throat of the horn communicates with diaphragm 16 through an acoustical impedance matching section 27 which is a tubular space having a length of A1 wave-length at the signal frequency. A flange plate 28 mechanically secured to the mouth of the horn is fastened to base 17 and cap 18 by means of fasteners 30. Fasteners 30 also serve the function of retaining cap 18 against base 17, thus holding electrode 21 in place and in addition retaining an electrode 31, as shown in FIGURE 1, against cap assembly 18 to which lead 25 is attached. In the operation of the described microphone, an ultrasonic radiated signal reaching horn 26 is channeled through the quarterwave impedance matching section 27 to impinge upon diaphragm 16. The received sonic signal constitutes a small force applied to the resonant diaphragm to set it into fiexural mode vibration. The small force applied to the center of the diaphragm produces a displacement of large amplitude and results in a much larger force appearing around the edge of the diaphragm. This large force developed at the edge is applied to the bender and results in its displacement or bending, This displacement is of much smaller amplitude than that experienced by the diaphragm in view of the high mechanical impedance of the bender, but, nonetheless, establishes fiexural mode vibration therein of an amplitude considerably larger than that which would have resulted had the bender been directly exposed to the acoustic pressure. The mechanical bending action, through piezoelectrical conversion, results in an electrical signal appearing on electrodes 21 and 31.
The described mechanical impedance transformation, from a condition of large amplitude displacement and low driving force acting upon diaphragm 16 to a condition of low amplitude displacement and high driving force acting upon the bender, is analogous to an electrical impedance transformer for converting between parallel and series resonant impedance relationship. This basic concept is more completely explained in the abovementioned copending application of Robert Adler.
A modified microphone is shown in FIGURE 4, where, instead of sandwiching diaphragm 16 between plates 11 and 12, a cup-shaped diaphragm 32 has its sides cemented to the sides of hole 15. This embodiment is advantageous in that there is greater flexibility in the placement of the diaphragm within hole 15, The operation of the device is in all respects similar to that of the embodiment of FIGURES 13.
Still another embodiment is shown in FIGURES 57 where a rectangular bender is utilized with a rectangular hole having a rectangular diaphragm 16 which is clamped at two ends 35 and 36 as shown in dashed outline in FIGURE 5 and in FIGURE 7. Bender 10' is suspended 1n the microphone housing by means of two thin flexible sheets 37 and 38 which extend from the edges of the bender and are clamped between the respective plates.
As detailed in FIGURE 6, the individual piezoelectric plates are polarized longitudinally in contrast to the thickness polarization shown in FIGURE 3; the operation is similar to that of the embodiment of FIGURES 1-3. However, here the frequency of fiexural resonance is inversely proportional to the square of the length of one side of the rectangular hole. A further modification of the embodiment of FIGURES 5-7 may be made by clamping diaphragm 16' at only one end thus allowing the diaphragm to vibrate in a free-clamped mode,
Since there are no protrusions above the surface of the bender, as in the Adler microphone, the microphone of the present invention is more compact. Also, the sandwiching of the impedance matching diaphragm between the plates of the bender, or as in FIGURE 4 the cementing of the sides of the diaphragm to the bender, results in a more shock-resistant, structurally stronger microphone.
The band width of a microphone of this type is related to the mass of the impedance matching diaphragm. The type of construction disclosed provides greater variety in choice of band width since the impedance matching structure can be made with less mass.
While particular embodiments of the invention has been shown and described, it is apparent that modifica- 6 tions and alterations may be made, and it is intended in the appended claim to cover all such modifications and alternations as may fall within the true spirit and scope of the invention.
I claim: An arrangement for effecting transfer of acoustical energy with respect to a medium having a predetermined acoustical impedance at a given signal frequency comprising: a fiexural element comprising two piezoelectric plates including means defining at least one hole therein and having a vibratory frequency of mechancial resonance approximately equal to said signal frequency and a mechanical impedance at said signal frequency which is high relative to the impedance of said medium; a mechanical impedance-transformation device sandwiched between said piezoelectric plates for coupling said flexural element to said medium and comprising a mechanically resonant vibrator element exposed to said medium through said hole in said fiexural element and having an impedance at said signal frequency intermediate that of said fiexural element and said medium and a frequency of fiexural resonance corresponding to that of said flexural element, said fiexural element and said vibrator element constituting a mechanical impedance transformer which is the analogue of an electrical impedance transformer for converting between parallel and series resonant impedance relationships.
References Cited by the Examiner UNITED STATES PATENTS 2,224,891 12/1940 Wright 310-96 2,386,279 10/1945 Tibbetts 3108.6 X 2,607,858 8/1952 Mason 179-110 2,722,614 11/1955 Fryklund 3108.6 2,747,090 5/1956 Cavalieri et al. 3108.6 X 2,778,881 1/1957 Fryklund 1791 10 2,910,545 10/1959 Glenn l79110 2,956,538 10/1960 Rich -2 l81.5 X 3,058,539 10/1962 Adler 181-.5
BENJAMIN A, BORCHELT, Primary Examiner.
KATHLEEN CLAFFY, CARL W. ROBINSON, SAM- UEL FEINBERG, Examiners.
A. S. ALPERT, J. W. MILLS, M. F. HUBLER,
Assistant Examiners.
US137345A 1961-09-11 1961-09-11 Ceramic microphone Expired - Lifetime US3253674A (en)

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Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3510698A (en) * 1967-04-17 1970-05-05 Dynamics Corp America Electroacoustical transducer
US3860838A (en) * 1972-06-26 1975-01-14 Sumitomo Electric Industries Piezoelectric buzzer assembly
US4190784A (en) * 1978-07-25 1980-02-26 The Stoneleigh Trust, Fred M. Dellorfano, Jr. & Donald P. Massa, Trustees Piezoelectric electroacoustic transducers of the bi-laminar flexural vibrating type
US4228379A (en) * 1978-08-28 1980-10-14 American District Telegraph Company Diaphragm type piezoelectric electroacoustic transducer
US4456849A (en) * 1981-09-22 1984-06-26 Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd. Piezoelectric ultrasonic transducer with damped suspension
US6144142A (en) * 1998-11-06 2000-11-07 Face International Corp. Multi-layer piezoelectric transformer mounting device
US6218766B1 (en) 1997-06-19 2001-04-17 Noise Cancellation Technologies, Inc. Loudspeaker assembly

Citations (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2224891A (en) * 1933-08-16 1940-12-17 Russell B Wright Oscillating mechanical or electromechanical system
US2386279A (en) * 1942-07-21 1945-10-09 Raymond W Tibbetts Piezoelectric device
US2607858A (en) * 1948-06-19 1952-08-19 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Electromechanical transducer
US2722614A (en) * 1951-08-11 1955-11-01 Gulton Mfg Co Vibration and shock-responsive device
US2747090A (en) * 1953-07-01 1956-05-22 Philco Corp Electromechanical oscillator detector system
US2778881A (en) * 1951-08-03 1957-01-22 Gulton Ind Inc Microphone
US2910545A (en) * 1954-08-30 1959-10-27 Gen Electric Transducer
US2956538A (en) * 1957-12-10 1960-10-18 Gen Ultrasonics Company Diaphragm vibration control
US3058539A (en) * 1958-05-15 1962-10-16 Zenith Radio Corp Transducer with impedance-matching bridge

Patent Citations (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2224891A (en) * 1933-08-16 1940-12-17 Russell B Wright Oscillating mechanical or electromechanical system
US2386279A (en) * 1942-07-21 1945-10-09 Raymond W Tibbetts Piezoelectric device
US2607858A (en) * 1948-06-19 1952-08-19 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Electromechanical transducer
US2778881A (en) * 1951-08-03 1957-01-22 Gulton Ind Inc Microphone
US2722614A (en) * 1951-08-11 1955-11-01 Gulton Mfg Co Vibration and shock-responsive device
US2747090A (en) * 1953-07-01 1956-05-22 Philco Corp Electromechanical oscillator detector system
US2910545A (en) * 1954-08-30 1959-10-27 Gen Electric Transducer
US2956538A (en) * 1957-12-10 1960-10-18 Gen Ultrasonics Company Diaphragm vibration control
US3058539A (en) * 1958-05-15 1962-10-16 Zenith Radio Corp Transducer with impedance-matching bridge

Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3510698A (en) * 1967-04-17 1970-05-05 Dynamics Corp America Electroacoustical transducer
US3860838A (en) * 1972-06-26 1975-01-14 Sumitomo Electric Industries Piezoelectric buzzer assembly
US4190784A (en) * 1978-07-25 1980-02-26 The Stoneleigh Trust, Fred M. Dellorfano, Jr. & Donald P. Massa, Trustees Piezoelectric electroacoustic transducers of the bi-laminar flexural vibrating type
US4228379A (en) * 1978-08-28 1980-10-14 American District Telegraph Company Diaphragm type piezoelectric electroacoustic transducer
US4456849A (en) * 1981-09-22 1984-06-26 Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd. Piezoelectric ultrasonic transducer with damped suspension
US6218766B1 (en) 1997-06-19 2001-04-17 Noise Cancellation Technologies, Inc. Loudspeaker assembly
US6144142A (en) * 1998-11-06 2000-11-07 Face International Corp. Multi-layer piezoelectric transformer mounting device

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