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dc.contributor.author
 hal.structure.identifier
EGE, Kerem
31116 Laboratoire Vibrations Acoustique [LVA]
dc.contributor.author
 hal.structure.identifier
BOUTILLON, Xavier
1167 Laboratoire de mécanique des solides [LMS]
dc.contributor.author
 hal.structure.identifier
REBILLAT, Marc
86289 Laboratoire Procédés et Ingénierie en Mécanique et Matériaux [PIMM]
dc.date.accessioned2014
dc.date.available2014
dc.date.issued2013
dc.date.submitted2014
dc.identifier.issn0022-460X
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10985/8195
dc.description.abstractThe piano soundboard transforms the string vibration into sound and therefore, its vibrations are of primary importance for the sound characteristics of the instrument. An original vibro-acoustical method is presented to isolate the soundboard nonlinearity from that of the exciting device (here: a loudspeaker) and to measure it. The nonlinear part of the soundboard response to an external excitation is quantitatively estimated for the first time, at 40 dB below the linear part at the ff nuance. Given this essentially linear response, a modal identification is performed up to 3 kHz by means of a novel high resolution modal analysis technique [K. Ege, X. Boutillon, B. David, High-resolution modal analysis, Journal of Sound and Vibration 325 (4–5) (2009) 852–869]. Modal dampings (which, so far, were unknown for the piano in this frequency range) are determined in the mid-frequency domain where FFT-based methods fail to evaluate them with an acceptable precision. They turn out to be close to those imposed by wood. A finite-element modelling of the soundboard is also presented. The low-order modal shapes and the comparison between the corresponding experimental and numerical modal frequencies suggest that the boundary conditions can be considered as blocked, except at very low frequencies. The frequency-dependency of the estimated modal densities and the observation of modal shapes reveal two well-separated regimes. Below 1 kHz, the soundboard vibrates more or less like a homogeneous plate. Above that limit, the structural waves are confined by ribs, as already noticed by several authors, and localised in restricted areas (one or a few inter-rib spaces), presumably due to a slightly irregular spacing of the ribs across the soundboard.
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherElsevier
dc.rightsPost-print
dc.titleVibroacoustics of the piano soundboard : (Non)linearity and modal properties in the low- and mid-frequency ranges
dc.identifier.doi10.1016/j.jsv.2012.10.012
dc.typdocArticle dans une revue avec comité de lecture
dc.localisationCentre de Paris
dc.subject.halSciences de l'ingénieur: Acoustique
dc.subject.halSciences de l'ingénieur: Matériaux
dc.subject.halSciences de l'ingénieur: Mécanique
dc.subject.halSciences de l'ingénieur: Mécanique: Mécanique des structures
ensam.audienceInternationale
ensam.page1288–1305
ensam.journalJournal of Sound and Vibration
ensam.volume332
hal.description.errorBad Request
hal.statusunsent
dc.identifier.eissn1095-8568


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