Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
560747 Mechanical Systems and Signal Processing 2010 12 Pages PDF
Abstract
This paper presents a novel adaptive control scheme, with improved convergence rate, for the equalization of harmonic disturbances such as engine noise. First, modifications for improving convergence speed of the standard filtered-X LMS control are described. Equalization capabilities are then implemented, allowing the independent tuning of harmonics. Eventually, by providing the desired order vs. engine speed profiles, the pursued sound quality attributes can be achieved. The proposed control scheme is first demonstrated with a simple secondary path model and, then, experimentally validated with the aid of a vehicle mockup which is excited with engine noise. The engine excitation is provided by a real-time sound quality equivalent engine simulator. Stationary and transient engine excitations are used to assess the control performance. The results reveal that the proposed controller is capable of large order-level reductions (up to 30 dB) for stationary excitation, which allows a comfortable margin for equalization. The same holds for slow run-ups (View the MathML source>15s) thanks to the improved convergence rate. This margin, however, gets narrower with shorter run-ups (View the MathML source≤10s).
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Signal Processing
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