Laser-sound: optoacoustic transduction from digital audio streams

Abstract This work presents a novel laser-based optoacoustic transducer capable of reproducing controlled and continuous sound of arbitrary complexity in the air or on solid targets. Light-to-sound transduction is achieved via laser-induced breakdown, leading to the formation of plasma acoustic sour...

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Main Authors: Konstantinos Kaleris, Björn Stelzner, Panagiotis Hatziantoniou, Dimosthenis Trimis, John Mourjopoulos
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Publishing Group 2021-01-01
Series:Scientific Reports
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-78990-z
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spelling doaj-2d89429d67d149459fdbec34e89e23802021-01-24T12:29:47ZengNature Publishing GroupScientific Reports2045-23222021-01-0111111210.1038/s41598-020-78990-zLaser-sound: optoacoustic transduction from digital audio streamsKonstantinos Kaleris0Björn Stelzner1Panagiotis Hatziantoniou2Dimosthenis Trimis3John Mourjopoulos4Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Wire Communications Laboratory, Audio and Acoustic Technology Group, University of PatrasKarlsruhe Institute of Technology, Engler-Bunte-InstituteDepartment of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Wire Communications Laboratory, Audio and Acoustic Technology Group, University of PatrasKarlsruhe Institute of Technology, Engler-Bunte-InstituteDepartment of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Wire Communications Laboratory, Audio and Acoustic Technology Group, University of PatrasAbstract This work presents a novel laser-based optoacoustic transducer capable of reproducing controlled and continuous sound of arbitrary complexity in the air or on solid targets. Light-to-sound transduction is achieved via laser-induced breakdown, leading to the formation of plasma acoustic sources in any desired spatial location. The acoustic signal is encoded into pulse streams via a discrete-time audio modulation and is reproduced by fast consecutive excitation of the target medium with appropriately modulated laser pulses. This results in the signal being directly reconstructed at the desired location of the target medium without the need for a receiver or demodulation device. In this work, the principles and evaluation results of such a novel laser-sound prototype system are presented. The performance of the prototype is evaluated by systematic experimental measurements of audio test signals, from which the basic acoustical response is derived. Moreover, a generic computational model is presented that allows for the simulation of laser-sound reproduction of 1-bit or multibit audio streams. The model evaluations are validated by comparison with the acoustic measurements, whereby a good agreement is found. Finally, the computational model is used to simulate an ideal optoacoustic transducer based on the specifications of state-of-the-art commercially available lasers.https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-78990-z
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Konstantinos Kaleris
Björn Stelzner
Panagiotis Hatziantoniou
Dimosthenis Trimis
John Mourjopoulos
spellingShingle Konstantinos Kaleris
Björn Stelzner
Panagiotis Hatziantoniou
Dimosthenis Trimis
John Mourjopoulos
Laser-sound: optoacoustic transduction from digital audio streams
Scientific Reports
author_facet Konstantinos Kaleris
Björn Stelzner
Panagiotis Hatziantoniou
Dimosthenis Trimis
John Mourjopoulos
author_sort Konstantinos Kaleris
title Laser-sound: optoacoustic transduction from digital audio streams
title_short Laser-sound: optoacoustic transduction from digital audio streams
title_full Laser-sound: optoacoustic transduction from digital audio streams
title_fullStr Laser-sound: optoacoustic transduction from digital audio streams
title_full_unstemmed Laser-sound: optoacoustic transduction from digital audio streams
title_sort laser-sound: optoacoustic transduction from digital audio streams
publisher Nature Publishing Group
series Scientific Reports
issn 2045-2322
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Abstract This work presents a novel laser-based optoacoustic transducer capable of reproducing controlled and continuous sound of arbitrary complexity in the air or on solid targets. Light-to-sound transduction is achieved via laser-induced breakdown, leading to the formation of plasma acoustic sources in any desired spatial location. The acoustic signal is encoded into pulse streams via a discrete-time audio modulation and is reproduced by fast consecutive excitation of the target medium with appropriately modulated laser pulses. This results in the signal being directly reconstructed at the desired location of the target medium without the need for a receiver or demodulation device. In this work, the principles and evaluation results of such a novel laser-sound prototype system are presented. The performance of the prototype is evaluated by systematic experimental measurements of audio test signals, from which the basic acoustical response is derived. Moreover, a generic computational model is presented that allows for the simulation of laser-sound reproduction of 1-bit or multibit audio streams. The model evaluations are validated by comparison with the acoustic measurements, whereby a good agreement is found. Finally, the computational model is used to simulate an ideal optoacoustic transducer based on the specifications of state-of-the-art commercially available lasers.
url https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-78990-z
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