figurer och grafer
Licentiatseminarium

Licentiatseminarium i byggteknik (maskinteknik): Jörgen Olsson

Titel: Low frequency impact sound in timber buildings – simulations and measurements
Ämne: Byggteknik (maskinteknik)
Fakultet: Fakulteten för teknik
Datum: Onsdagen den 30 november 2016 kl 10.00
Plats: Sal Tegnér, hus H, Växjö
Opponent: Professor Leif Kari, KTH
Ordförande: Adj professor Charlotte Bengtsson, Skogsforsk
Handledare: Lektor Andreas Linderholt, Institutionen för maskinteknik, Linnéuniversitetet
Examinator: Professor Marie Johansson, Institutionen för byggteknik, Linnéuniversitetet
Kontaktperson: Jörgen Olsson

Abstract

An increased share of construction with timber is one possible way of achieving more sustainable and energy-efficient life cycles of buildings. The main reason is that wood is a renewable material and buildings require a large amount of resources. Timber buildings taller than two storeys were prohibited in Europe until the 1990s due to fire regulations. In 1994, this prohibition was removed in Sweden.

Some of the early multi-storey timber buildings were associated with more complaints due to impact sound than concrete buildings with the same measured impact sound class rating. Research in later years has shown that the frequency range used for rating has not been sufficiently low in order to include all the sound characteristics that are important for subjective perception of impact sound in light weight timber buildings. The AkuLite project showed that the frequency range has to be extended down to 20 Hz in order to give a good quality of the rating.

This low frequency range of interest requires a need for knowledge of sound field distribution, how to best measure the sound, how to predict the sound transmission levels and how to correlate numerical predictions with measurements.

Here, the goal is to improve the knowledge and methodology concerning measurements and predictions of low frequency impact sound in light weight timber buildings. Impact sound fields are determined by grid measurement in rooms within timber buildings with different designs of their joist floors. The measurements are used to increase the understanding of impact sound and to benchmark different field measurement methods. By estimating transfer functions, from impact forces to vibrations and then sound pressures in receiving rooms, from vibrational test data, improved possibilities to correlate the experimental results to numerical simulations are achieved. A number of excitation devices are compared experimentally to evaluate different characteristics of the test data achieved. Further comparisons between a timber based hybrid joist floor and a modern concrete floor are made using FE-models to evaluate how stiffness and surface mass parameters affect the impact sound transfer and radiation.

The measurements of sound fields show that light weight timber floors in small rooms tend to have their highest sound levels in the low frequency region, where the modes are well separated, and that the highest levels even can occur below the frequency of the first room mode of the air. In rooms with excitation from the floor above, the highest levels tend to occur at the floor level and in the floor corners, if the excitation is made in the middle of the room above. Due to nonlinearities, different excitation levels may affect the transfer function in low frequencies which was shown in an experimental study. Surface mass and bending stiffness of floor systems are shown, by simulations, to be important for the amount of sound radiated.

By applying a transfer function methodology, measuring the excitation forces as well as the responses, improvements of correlation analyses between measurements and simulations can be achieved.

Sal Tegnér, hus H, Växjö Jörgen Olsson Lägg till i din kalender