1. Introduction
Conventional ways of improving the low-frequency absorption by a porous layer are to increase its thickness and to mount it with an air space between it and a rigid backing surface. Restrictions on space and weight in aerospace or automotive applications make such solutions impractical. Perforation of porous materials may improve their sound absorption [
1,
2]. Long convoluted sound channels or labyrinths in a solid matrix result in good impedance matching [
3] and high absorption coefficients at wavelengths much greater than the layer thickness [
4]. However, computations for complex perforations and for labyrinthine structures use numerical methods such as Finite Element Modelling. This paper offers analytical approximations for predicting the result of making labyrinthine slit perforations in a rigid-porous layer. An array of narrow labyrinthine slits in a non-porous solid may be considered as if it were a porous material with highly tortuous slit pores. In this paper, contiguous units, each of which contains a labyrinthine slit, are considered to form a rigid-porous solid acting, acoustically, as an effective fluid layer. Analytical approximations for the acoustical properties of horizontal- and vertical-wall labyrinths in a non-porous matrix use the classical result for sound propagation in a rigid-porous medium with tortuous slit-like pores [
5]. Then the dual-porosity theory [
6,
7] is used to predict the results of incorporating labyrinthine slits in a matrix of a rigid-porous material with high flow resistivity. The influence of additional tortuosity due to changes in labyrinthine slit cross section [
8] is considered. Useful narrowband low-frequency absorption is predicted to result from pressure diffusion and tortuosity effects. Example predictions suggest that labyrinthine slit perforations in porous materials offer a great potential for deep sub wavelength narrowband absorption peaks.
2. Labyrinthine Slits Formed by Walls Parallel and Normal to the Layer Surface
Consider a plane wave at normal incidence on a layer of contiguous rectangular unit cells, each of which contains a single labyrinthine slit of width
b with
N folds in the slit formed by walls of length
and width
w. The walls are either parallel to (
Figure 1a) or normal to (
Figure 1b) the surface on which the wave is incident. In this paper, the former arrangement is called a horizontal-wall labyrinth and the latter arrangement is called a vertical-wall labyrinth. Associated parameters are given H or V subscripts.
The shortest paths through the slit labyrinths are approximated by the zigzag paths represented by broken lines in
Figure 1a,b. The corresponding tortuosity values (
,
) are underestimates since the fluid streamlines must pass around the internal walls. On the other hand, calculations of tortuosity (
) using piecewise linear paths along the centres of the labyrinthine slits are overestimates since the streamlines will curve around corners. Expressions for labyrinth tortuosity corresponding to
Figure 1a,b and according to these streamline path length estimates are given in Equations (1) to (4), respectively. Predictions in this paper assume the zigzag path approximations.
The expressions for bulk,
, and surface,
, porosities of the horizontal- and vertical-wall labyrinth structures in
Figure 1 are given in Equations (5) to (8),
The complex density, (
), complex compressibility, (
), propagation constant, (
), and normalised impedance (
) of an effective fluid medium equivalent to a labyrinthine slit structure are, respectively [
5],
are density, sound speed, Prandtl number and dynamic viscosity in air, respectively,
is either
or
,
is either
or
and
is either
or
. Time dependence
is understood where
.
3. Labyrinthine Slit Perforations in a Rigid-Porous Matrix
With sufficient scale separation between the characteristic matrix pore size and the labyrinthine slit width, a labyrinthine perforation in a porous matrix may be regarded as a dual-porosity system. If there is a high permeability contrast between the matrix and the labyrinth, the resulting bulk complex density,
, and complex compressibility,
, are [
6],
where
and
represent the complex density and compressibility of the rigid-porous matrix and
is the pressure diffusion function.
For a high permeability contrast,
, is given by [
6,
7]
where
is a dynamic pressure permeability function,
is the static pressure permeability involving half the width,
, between perforation openings at the surface and
is a pressure diffusion length.
and
denote the porosity and flow resistivity of the porous matrix, respectively. In a horizontal-wall labyrinth, the distance between adjacent slit openings,
, is
. In a vertical-wall labyrinth, the distance between adjacent slit openings is
.
In
Figure 2a,
is plotted as a function of frequency for a 10-fold vertical-wall labyrinthine slit perforation, in which a 3 mm wide labyrinthine slit is formed by 1 mm wide, 45 mm long walls, in a porous matrix in which the pores have the form of micro-slits (0.04 mm wide slits inclined at 70° to the normal, porosity 0.9). The acoustical properties of a matrix of parallel identical slits of width
inclined at
to the normal are given by Equations (9) and (10) with
replaced by
,
replaced by
and
[
5].
The flow resistivity,
, due to slit-like pores is calculated from [
5]
where
are appropriate for the labyrinthine slit or inclined slit matrix.
The flow resistivity of the labyrinthine slit in a non-porous matrix (3.5 kPa s m
−2) is much smaller than that (1297 kPa s m
−2) of the porous matrix.
Figure 2b shows the corresponding prediction for the imaginary part of the bulk modulus,
, which shows a peak near the pressure diffusion frequency (97.5 Hz).
Figure 3 shows predictions of normal incidence absorption spectra assuming 5.8 cm thick hard-backed layers of rockwool or melamine foam with parameters according to the Johnson–Champoux–Allard–Lafarge (JCAL) model (see
Table 1) with and without horizontal-wall labyrinthine slit perforations. The frequency range plotted in the figures is restricted to below 1 kHz since the low-frequency performance is of most interest. As with other forms of perforation [
1,
2], the higher permeability contrast between the perforation and the porous matrix yields the more significant change in low-frequency absorption.
Figure 4a,b show predictions of normal incidence absorption coefficient spectra for a 5 cm thick hard-backed very-high-flow-resistivity slanted slit matrix with (solid line) and without (dotted line) horizontal- and vertical-wall labyrinthine slit perforations, respectively.
The absorption peaks at 240 Hz in
Figure 4a and 170 Hz in
Figure 4b correspond to the layer thickness being 1/28th and 1/40th of the incident wavelength, respectively. Also shown are absorption spectra predicted for the labyrinthine slit perforations in a non-porous rigid solid structure (broken black lines in
Figure 4a,b) which result in rather narrow absorption peaks.
For a horizontal-wall configuration such as that shown in
Figure 1a, if the wall width, labyrinthine slit width and slit folding number and hence the corresponding layer thickness,
, are fixed, then the tortuosity and hence the frequency of the lowest-frequency absorption peak are determined by the wall length. In a vertical-wall configuration such as that shown in
Figure 1b, if the wall width, wall length, and labyrinthine slit width and hence the layer thickness,
, are fixed, then the tortuosity and hence the frequency of the lowest-frequency absorption peak are dominated by the number of folds in the slit, N. These influences are illustrated in
Figure 5a,b.
In a horizontal-wall labyrinth with fixed , and , increasing the wall length, , is predicted to decrease the frequency of the lowest-frequency absorption peak but to decrease its magnitude also. Similarly, in a vertical-wall labyrinth with fixed , and , increasing the slit folding number, , is predicted to decrease the frequency and magnitude of the lowest-frequency absorption peak.
4. Alternating-Width Vertical-Wall Labyrinthine Slit Perforation in a Porous Matrix
If a slit has abrupt changes in cross section along its length, the fluid streamlines are perturbed and, as a result, the tortuosity is increased. Consider the vertical-wall labyrinthine slit shown in
Figure 6 in which the slit width alternates between
and
. The broken line in
Figure 6 indicates the assumed zigzag approximation to the streamline path.
The tortuosity of this labyrinthine architecture,
, is the product of that resulting from the zig-zag approximation of the streamline path and that due to the changes in cross section [
8] which is the second factor in Equation (15). Similarly, the tortuosity,
, with the slit centre line path approximation is given by Equation (16).
The corresponding complex density and compressibility are given by [
9],
For the alternating-width vertical-wall labyrinth shown in
Figure 6, the distance between adjacent slit openings is
. The pressure diffusion function for the alternating-width labyrinthine slit perforation,
, is obtained from Equations (12), (13) and (18).
A consequence of the increased tortuosity due to alternating slit width is that, for a given layer thickness, wall length and porous matrix, a low-frequency absorption peak at a target frequency can be achieved with a lower slit folding number than required with a uniform labyrinthine slit width. This is illustrated in
Figure 7.
The absorption peak at 170 Hz, corresponding to the layer thickness of 4.5 cm being 1/45th of the incident wavelength, is predicted for either a ten-turn 3 mm wide labyrinthine slit or a six-turn labyrinthine slit with alternating widths of 3 and 27 mm.
A second consequence of the extra tortuosity associated with alternating the width of a vertical-wall labyrinthine slit is that a narrow-band low-frequency absorption peak is predicted even if it is used to perforate a relatively low-flow-resistivity and low-porosity matrix. This is illustrated in
Figure 8. A low-frequency high-absorption peak at 200 Hz is predicted for a 6-fold alternating-width vertical-wall labyrinthine slit perforation in a 4.5 cm thick matrix containing 0.3 mm wide slits at 60° to surface normal with a porosity of only 0.1. A lower absorption peak at 220 Hz is predicted for a 10-fold 3 mm wide labyrinthine perforation in the same porous matrix. 0.3 mm wide micro-slits are readily manufacturable using a commonly available 3D printing method [
10].
If an alternating-width labyrinthine slit perforation is created in a lower-flow-resistivity and low-porosity matrix, then the tortuosity of the porous matrix is predicted to have a strong influence. This is illustrated by the predictions in
Figure 9, where, keeping all other parameters the same, increasing the tortuosity of the matrix from 1 (matrix slits normal to surface) to 8.55 (matrix slits inclined at 70° to the normal) reduces the frequency of the lowest-frequency absorption peak from 300 to 210 Hz.
5. Concluding Remarks
Analytical approximations to the acoustical effects of horizontal- or vertical-wall labyrinthine slit perforations in a high-flow-resistivity porous matrix have been developed and used to predict potentially useful low-frequency narrow-band sound absorption from hard-backed layers with deep sub wavelength thickness. The predicted effects combine the influences of labyrinthine slit tortuosity and pressure diffusion.
Both horizontal- and vertical-wall labyrinthine slits with constant width can have very high values of tortuosity. However, vertical-wall labyrinthine perforations with alternating widths offer even higher tortuosity due to the changes in slit cross section, thereby enabling predictions of useful low-frequency performance using fewer slit folds or a lower-flow-resistivity and lower-porosity matrix than would be needed for a labyrinthine slit perforation of constant width.
The predictions reported in this paper are based on zigzag approximations of the tortuous paths in the labyrinths. Comparisons of the example estimates in
Table 2 based on zigzag and centre line paths in various labyrinthine slits suggest that estimates that correspond to paths along the centre lines could be at least 25% higher than the zigzag path estimates.
More accurate tortuosity estimates could be established by numerical simulations of steady inertial fluid flow in relevant configurations. These and other numerical simulations outlined elsewhere [
11] will be used, together with measurements on 3D-printed examples, to investigate the accuracy of the analytical approximations for absorption coefficient spectra due to labyrinthine slit perforations in porous materials.
Similar approximations could be derived for the acoustical properties of a three-dimensional rectangular labyrinthine perforation in rigid-porous matrix which has the potential for yet greater streamline path tortuosity and, thereby, even lower-frequency narrowband absorption peaks if used in a thin hard-backed porous layer.