Abstract: The prediction of indoor sound quality through computer simulation is more and more widely used in architectural acoustic design. This article verifies the correlation between the simulated prediction results and actual measurements in the room acoustics by discussing the objective sound quality of the architectural acoustics of a broadcasting station of a provincial radio station. In this paper, the computer finite element method is mainly used to simulate the impulse acoustic response at multiple measurement points in the broadcasting room, and the impulse response simulation results are compared with the DIRAC sound field analysis and test platform based on Brüel & KjærK. The comparison focused on objective sound quality parameters such as T30, D50 and RASTI. The analysis results show that the predicted value and the measured value have a high correlation and confidence rate, which indicates that the finite element analysis has a reference value in the acoustic design of architectural acoustics. This allows acoustic engineers to combine the DIRAC acoustic analysis test platform for more sound signal post-processing research. It is an effective extension to the existing acoustic simulation and prediction technology.
Key words:Finite element analysis; Acoustic simulation; Impulse response; Objective sound quality parameters; Dirac; Post processing; Scilab
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