njiruk
Mechanical
- May 30, 2012
- 14
Hello,
At the moment I'm using an (obviously expensive) B&K microphone with a dynamic threshold at 162dB, to be able to measure the acoustic pressure inside a clarinet mouthpiece.
As I'm considering to move on to a commercial application I'm trying to find a way to do the same with a cheap microphone.
Electret microphones have the required properties, except of the very much lower dynamic threshold (maximum 125dB).
So I wax thinking, wouldn't it be possible to simply design an acoustic resistance by placing the electret in a small capsule with one opening that is covered with a small stiff plate. That plate would have it's first modal resonance far above the highest frequency of interest (10kHz for me), so that the stiffness is reigning under that frequency. It's displacement will be proportional to the pressure in front of the plate and thus, inside the capsule a proportional but much weaker pressure variation will occur...
Or am I overlooking something?
Of course, the dynamic range will be the same as the electret, so small pressures won't be measurable, but for that I might use an array of those electrets perhaps.
Alternatively, I'm also interested if anyone would know of another cheap microphone type that could do the job. I considered MEMS microphones, but it seems to me that their threshold is not higher then electrets and their low frequency response seems to be worse...
Thanks!
K
At the moment I'm using an (obviously expensive) B&K microphone with a dynamic threshold at 162dB, to be able to measure the acoustic pressure inside a clarinet mouthpiece.
As I'm considering to move on to a commercial application I'm trying to find a way to do the same with a cheap microphone.
Electret microphones have the required properties, except of the very much lower dynamic threshold (maximum 125dB).
So I wax thinking, wouldn't it be possible to simply design an acoustic resistance by placing the electret in a small capsule with one opening that is covered with a small stiff plate. That plate would have it's first modal resonance far above the highest frequency of interest (10kHz for me), so that the stiffness is reigning under that frequency. It's displacement will be proportional to the pressure in front of the plate and thus, inside the capsule a proportional but much weaker pressure variation will occur...
Or am I overlooking something?
Of course, the dynamic range will be the same as the electret, so small pressures won't be measurable, but for that I might use an array of those electrets perhaps.
Alternatively, I'm also interested if anyone would know of another cheap microphone type that could do the job. I considered MEMS microphones, but it seems to me that their threshold is not higher then electrets and their low frequency response seems to be worse...
Thanks!
K