Abstract:A multichannel active noise control (ANC) method with exterior radiation suppression is proposed. When applying ANC in a three-dimensional space by using multiple microphones and loudspeakers, the loudspeaker output can amplify noise outside a region of target positions because most of current ANC methods do not take into consideration the exterior radiation of secondary loudspeakers. We propose a normalized least mean square algorithm for feedforward ANC in the frequency domain based on the Riemannian optimization to update the control filter with the exterior radiation power constrained to a target value. The advantages of the proposed method, compared with the algorithm using a penalty term of exterior radiation, were validated by numerical experiments: the exterior radiation power can be constrained during the adaptation process and the parameter for the constraint can be determined in advance.
Abstract:A spatial active noise control (ANC) method based on kernel interpolation of a sound field with exterior radiation suppression is proposed. The aim of spatial ANC is to reduce incoming noise over a target region by using multiple secondary sources and microphones. The method based on kernel interpolation of a sound field allows noise attenuation in a regional space with an array of arbitrary geometry. The cost function is defined as the acoustic potential energy, i.e., the regional integral of the power distribution inside the target region. However, this cost function does not take into consideration the exterior radiation of secondary sources. Thus, the acoustic power in the exterior region can be amplified by the output of the secondary sources. We propose two spatial ANC methods with exterior radiation suppression. The first approach is based on the minimization of the cost function formulated as a sum of the interior acoustic potential energy and exterior radiation power. The second approach is based on the minimization of the interior acoustic potential energy with inequality constraints on the exterior radiation power. Adaptive algorithms for minimizing the cost function are derived for the two approaches. Numerical experimental results indicate that the proposed methods can reduce the interior regional noise while suppressing the exterior radiation.
Abstract:A spatial active noise control (ANC) method based on the interpolation of a sound field from reference microphone signals is proposed. In most current spatial ANC methods, a sufficient number of error microphones are required to reduce noise over the target region because the sound field is estimated from error microphone signals. However, in practical applications, it is preferable that the number of error microphones is as small as possible to keep a space in the target region for ANC users. We propose to interpolate the sound field from reference microphones, which are normally placed outside the target region, instead of the error microphones. We derive a fixed filter for spatial noise reduction on the basis of the kernel ridge regression for sound field interpolation. Furthermore, to compensate for estimation errors, we combine the proposed fixed filter with multichannel ANC based on a transition of the control filter using the error microphone signals. Numerical experimental results indicate that regional noise can be sufficiently reduced by the proposed methods even when the number of error microphones is particularly small.
Abstract:A sound field reproduction method called weighted pressure matching is proposed. Sound field reproduction is aimed at synthesizing the desired sound field using multiple loudspeakers inside a target region. Optimization-based methods are derived from the minimization of errors between synthesized and desired sound fields, which enable the use of an arbitrary array geometry in contrast with integral-equation-based methods. Pressure matching is widely used in the optimization-based sound field reproduction methods because of its simplicity of implementation. Its cost function is defined as the synthesis errors at multiple control points inside the target region; then, the driving signals of the loudspeakers are obtained by solving a least-squares problem. However, in pressure matching, the region between the control points is not taken into consideration. We define the cost function as the regional integration of the synthesis error over the target region. On the basis of the kernel interpolation of the sound field, this cost function is represented as the weighted square error of the synthesized pressures at the control points. Experimental results indicate that the proposed weighted pressure matching outperforms conventional pressure matching.
Abstract:A spatial active noise control (ANC) method based on the individual kernel interpolation of primary and secondary sound fields is proposed. Spatial ANC is aimed at cancelling unwanted primary noise within a continuous region by using multiple secondary sources and microphones. A method based on the kernel interpolation of a sound field makes it possible to attenuate noise over the target region with flexible array geometry. Furthermore, by using the kernel function with directional weighting, prior information on primary noise source directions can be taken into consideration. However, whereas the sound field to be interpolated is a superposition of primary and secondary sound fields, the directional weight for the primary noise source was applied to the total sound field in previous work; therefore, the performance improvement was limited. We propose a method of individually interpolating the primary and secondary sound fields and formulate a normalized least-mean-square algorithm based on this interpolation method. Experimental results indicate that the proposed method outperforms the method based on total kernel interpolation.