CHARACTERISTICS OF A PULSATING JET THROUGH A SMALL MODULATED ORIFICE,WITH APPLICATION TO VOICE PRODUCTION

Citation
L. Mongeau et al., CHARACTERISTICS OF A PULSATING JET THROUGH A SMALL MODULATED ORIFICE,WITH APPLICATION TO VOICE PRODUCTION, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 102(2), 1997, pp. 1121-1133
Citations number
62
Categorie Soggetti
Acoustics
ISSN journal
00014966
Volume
102
Issue
2
Year of publication
1997
Part
1
Pages
1121 - 1133
Database
ISI
SICI code
0001-4966(1997)102:2<1121:COAPJT>2.0.ZU;2-O
Abstract
A detailed understanding of the aerodynamics of air flow in the larynx and the vocal tract is needed to refine physiological models of human voice production. This understanding can be applied in speech synthes is, voice diagnostics, and voice recognition. To date, most aeroacoust ic models of phonation have been based on Bernoulli:s orifice theory, i.e., the assumption that flow phenomena within the larynx are ''quasi -steady.'' This assumption, however, has never been rigorously verifie d experimentally. In this study, detailed aerodynamic measurements wer e performed of a pulsating open jet through a modulated orifice with a time-varying area. Orifice geometry and characteristic Reynolds numbe rs and Strouhal numbers of the pulsating jet flow were representative of speech production. Simple source-filter models based on the quasi-s teady flow assumption and an ideal one-dimensional monopole source mod el were found to yield satisfactory velocity, flow rate, and dynamic p ressure predictions for most of the duty cycle. Significant deviations from quasi-steady behavior were observed only during the early part o f the duty cycle, where the flow velocity in the center core rapidly r eached a peak value immediately after release of the false folds. This acoustic near-field phenomenon did not affect the pressure waves gene rated by the pulsating jet through the orifice, propagated in the long rigid tube upstream of the orifice. The impact on this phenomenon on actual sound generation within the larynx, and wall pressures on the v ocal folds, is not clear. (C) 1997 Acoustical Society of America.