Sc. Butler et al., A LOW-FREQUENCY DIRECTIONAL FLEXTENSIONAL TRANSDUCER AND LINE ARRAY, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 102(1), 1997, pp. 308-314
A unique low-frequency (900 Hz) class IV flextensional transducer that
produces an enhanced far-field pressure on one side and canceled far-
field pressure on the other side has been developed. The transducer ra
diating surface consists of a thick-walled elliptical aluminum shell a
nd a U.S. Navy type III piezoelectric stack along its major axis with
two active sections and one inactive section. The directionality is ac
hieved by simultaneously exciting the shell into an omnidirectional an
d dipole operation by driving stack into both extensional and bending
modes. Both measurements and modeling on this device show a front to b
ack pressure ratio of more than 30 dB, producing cardioid-type radiati
on patterns over an octave band. for a single transducer element. The
transducers measured mechanical Q is 8, coupling coefficient is 0.25,
and electroacoustic efficiency is 80% and produced a source level of 2
15 dB re: 1 mu Pa at 1 m when driven at a field limit of 394 kV/m (10
kV/in.) at resonance. The uniqueness of this transducer is its directi
onal beam patterns (directivity index=3.4 dB) and high acoustic output
power from a small (less than a third of a wavelength) single element
. Six of these transducers were placed in a closely packed line array
two-wavelengths long, The array successfully produced narrow direction
al sound beams (directivity index=8.7 dB) with a front to back ratio g
reater than 30 dB and a source level of 225 dB re: 1 mu Pa at 1 m. (C)
1997 Acoustical Society of America.