Development of a sonar equation formalism for fireground acoustics

Firefighters wear a plethora of personal protective equipment (PPE) in- cluding a Personal Alert Safety System (PASS) device. This device produces an audible alarm signal when it senses a lack of movement to help rescue teams detect and find firefighters who have become incapacitated on the firegrou...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Suits, Joelle
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/21291
id ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-21291
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-212912015-09-20T17:15:39ZDevelopment of a sonar equation formalism for fireground acousticsSuits, JoellePASSFireground acousticsFirefighters wear a plethora of personal protective equipment (PPE) in- cluding a Personal Alert Safety System (PASS) device. This device produces an audible alarm signal when it senses a lack of movement to help rescue teams detect and find firefighters who have become incapacitated on the fireground. Although this alarm works the majority of the time, there are instances where it has failed to be detected or found. Using a passive sonar approach, this study begins to provide a scientific background to improve the signal. The construct of the passive sonar equation helps to define a signal-to-noise ra- tio with information about the environment, source and receiver. This work presents studies of the noise level of the environment (NL), source level (SL) of the PASS device, and detection threshold of the receiver (DT) on the fire scene. To study NL and SL, equipment used by firefighters was recorded and analyzed for the sound pressure level, frequency content, and directionality compared to the PASS alarm. The NL on a fire scene has been found to be broadband, high intensity noise. The loudest piece of equipment was found to be a chainsaw and the quietest to be a pumper truck. The DT involves the ability of firefighters to detect and classify the PASS signal. Physical acous- tic experiments, using an acoustic manikin, show that PPE gear affects the sound reaching the ear by reducing the average received level and introducing peaks and nulls in head related transfer functions. In audiological tests on normal-hearing human subjects, this manifested itself by increasing the sound pressure level required to detect the PASS alarm while wearing PPE gear. Recommendations based on these findings are providedtext2013-09-24T18:51:21Z2013-082013-09-16August 20132013-09-24T18:51:21Zapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/2152/21291en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic PASS
Fireground acoustics
spellingShingle PASS
Fireground acoustics
Suits, Joelle
Development of a sonar equation formalism for fireground acoustics
description Firefighters wear a plethora of personal protective equipment (PPE) in- cluding a Personal Alert Safety System (PASS) device. This device produces an audible alarm signal when it senses a lack of movement to help rescue teams detect and find firefighters who have become incapacitated on the fireground. Although this alarm works the majority of the time, there are instances where it has failed to be detected or found. Using a passive sonar approach, this study begins to provide a scientific background to improve the signal. The construct of the passive sonar equation helps to define a signal-to-noise ra- tio with information about the environment, source and receiver. This work presents studies of the noise level of the environment (NL), source level (SL) of the PASS device, and detection threshold of the receiver (DT) on the fire scene. To study NL and SL, equipment used by firefighters was recorded and analyzed for the sound pressure level, frequency content, and directionality compared to the PASS alarm. The NL on a fire scene has been found to be broadband, high intensity noise. The loudest piece of equipment was found to be a chainsaw and the quietest to be a pumper truck. The DT involves the ability of firefighters to detect and classify the PASS signal. Physical acous- tic experiments, using an acoustic manikin, show that PPE gear affects the sound reaching the ear by reducing the average received level and introducing peaks and nulls in head related transfer functions. In audiological tests on normal-hearing human subjects, this manifested itself by increasing the sound pressure level required to detect the PASS alarm while wearing PPE gear. Recommendations based on these findings are provided === text
author Suits, Joelle
author_facet Suits, Joelle
author_sort Suits, Joelle
title Development of a sonar equation formalism for fireground acoustics
title_short Development of a sonar equation formalism for fireground acoustics
title_full Development of a sonar equation formalism for fireground acoustics
title_fullStr Development of a sonar equation formalism for fireground acoustics
title_full_unstemmed Development of a sonar equation formalism for fireground acoustics
title_sort development of a sonar equation formalism for fireground acoustics
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/21291
work_keys_str_mv AT suitsjoelle developmentofasonarequationformalismforfiregroundacoustics
_version_ 1716823173398265856