Artigo Revisado por pares

Transfer-Function Measurement with Sweeps

2001; Audio Engineering Society; Volume: 49; Issue: 6 Linguagem: Inglês

ISSN

1549-4950

Autores

Swen Müller, Paulo Massarani,

Tópico(s)

Structural Health Monitoring Techniques

Resumo

Transfer-function measurements using sweeps as excitation signals rather than pseudonoise signals show significantly higher immunity against distortion and time variance. Capturing binaural room impulse responses for high-quality auralization purposes requires a signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) greater than 90 dB, which is unattainable with maximum-length sequence (MLS) measurements because of loudspeaker nonlinearity, but it is fairly easy to reach with sweeps due to the possibility of complete rejection of harmonic distortion. Before investigating the differences and practical problems of measurements with MLS and sweeps and arguing why sweeps are the preferable choice for the majority of measurement tasks, the existing methods of obtaining transfer functions are reviewed. The continual need to use preemphasized excitation signals in acoustical measurements is also addressed. A method to create sweeps with arbitrary spectral contents, but constant or prescribed frequency-dependent temporal envelope, is presented. Finally, the possibility of simultaneously analyzing transfer functions and harmonics is investigated.

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