Duct absorber design

The in-duct attenuation performance, or insertion loss, of a range of absorbers was measured, and guidelines for the design and application of absorbers in air ducts were developed from the measured data. A test facility that met the requirements of ISO 7235 was designed and constructed. Insertion l...

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Main Author: Pettersson, Matthew J
Language:en
Published: University of Canterbury. Mechanical Engineering 2012
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10092/6415
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spelling ndltd-canterbury.ac.nz-oai-ir.canterbury.ac.nz-10092-64152015-03-30T15:29:21ZDuct absorber designPettersson, Matthew JThe in-duct attenuation performance, or insertion loss, of a range of absorbers was measured, and guidelines for the design and application of absorbers in air ducts were developed from the measured data. A test facility that met the requirements of ISO 7235 was designed and constructed. Insertion loss measurements were made using the test facility to investigate the effects of absorbent material and absorbent thickness, facing type, airflow conditions, and fixing method It was found that absorbent flow resistance was the most influential factor in determining the insertion loss of an absorber. The insertion loss of wall absorbers was significantly modified by changes in absorber thickness, which was attributed to the consequential change in flow resistance. Similarly, the insertion loss performance of bar absorbers with significantly varying thickness, and therefore varying flow resistance, was greater than that of bar absorbers with approximately constant thickness. The insertion loss of wall absorbers was very sensitive to impedance conditions at the boundary between the rear surface of the absorber and the duct wall. Insertion loss performance was improved by applying thin facings to the exposed surface of wall absorbers. Airflow velocity did not affect insertion loss over airflow velocities typical of building services ducts.University of Canterbury. Mechanical Engineering2012-03-14T23:15:31Z2012-03-14T23:15:31Z2002Electronic thesis or dissertationTexthttp://hdl.handle.net/10092/6415enNZCUCopyright Matthew J Petterssonhttp://library.canterbury.ac.nz/thesis/etheses_copyright.shtml
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
description The in-duct attenuation performance, or insertion loss, of a range of absorbers was measured, and guidelines for the design and application of absorbers in air ducts were developed from the measured data. A test facility that met the requirements of ISO 7235 was designed and constructed. Insertion loss measurements were made using the test facility to investigate the effects of absorbent material and absorbent thickness, facing type, airflow conditions, and fixing method It was found that absorbent flow resistance was the most influential factor in determining the insertion loss of an absorber. The insertion loss of wall absorbers was significantly modified by changes in absorber thickness, which was attributed to the consequential change in flow resistance. Similarly, the insertion loss performance of bar absorbers with significantly varying thickness, and therefore varying flow resistance, was greater than that of bar absorbers with approximately constant thickness. The insertion loss of wall absorbers was very sensitive to impedance conditions at the boundary between the rear surface of the absorber and the duct wall. Insertion loss performance was improved by applying thin facings to the exposed surface of wall absorbers. Airflow velocity did not affect insertion loss over airflow velocities typical of building services ducts.
author Pettersson, Matthew J
spellingShingle Pettersson, Matthew J
Duct absorber design
author_facet Pettersson, Matthew J
author_sort Pettersson, Matthew J
title Duct absorber design
title_short Duct absorber design
title_full Duct absorber design
title_fullStr Duct absorber design
title_full_unstemmed Duct absorber design
title_sort duct absorber design
publisher University of Canterbury. Mechanical Engineering
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10092/6415
work_keys_str_mv AT petterssonmatthewj ductabsorberdesign
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